Bhakti inquiry uses devotional questioning rather than analytical thinking to explore your lost identity; it treats the grief itself as a sacred teacher.
Bhakti inquiry differs from analytical self-examination; instead of thinking your way through grief, you ask questions in a spirit of devotion and openness, treating your pain as a messenger. Rather than "Why did I change?" (which invites defensive explanation), bhakti inquiry asks: "What was I protecting by holding that identity?" "What does this grief teach me about what I truly value?" "How does this loss invite me toward deeper freedom?" Mirabai's poems are sustained inquiries into longing: she doesn't explain her devotion; she interrogates it, deepens it, lets it transform her. This practice honors that your lost identity has wisdom to offer—not because you should have stayed that way, but because understanding what that self carried opens compassion. Bhakti inquiry creates space between the grief and your reaction to it, allowing the heart itself to become intelligent. The questions don't demand answers; they open you further, revealing layers of attachment, fear, and ultimately, love beneath the sorrow.
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.