Devotional practice that scrutinizes our own loves, attachments, and resistance to change with unflinching honesty.
Bhakti is not blind faith but devoted attention to what we truly value. Mirabai examined her own heart ruthlessly, questioning every assumption about duty, marriage, and social obligation. In anticipatory grief, bhakti becomes a method for examining what we are actually grieving: Is it a way of life, or our privilege within it? Are we mourning loss of certainty, or genuine suffering? Bhakti's examined heart asks us to look clearly at our attachments—what we cling to, what we fear losing, where we are deceiving ourselves. This examination is compassionate but rigorous. By practicing bhakti introspection, we distinguish authentic grief from ego-defense, moving toward responses grounded in truth rather than self-protection. This clarity becomes the foundation for meaningful action.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.