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Concept
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Bhakti Surrender: Making Space for Mystery

Bhakti devotion surrenders to what cannot be understood or controlled, opening the creative channel to forces larger than the individual self.

Mira
Why It Matters

Bhakti is sometimes misunderstood as passive submission, but it is more accurately described as active surrender—the deliberate opening of the self to something vast. Mirabai surrendered to Krishna, but in that surrender she found her power. In creative work emerging from grief, bhakti teaches that you need not have all the answers before you begin. Surrender to the work itself, to the mystery of what wants to be made through you. Let go of the demand to understand why loss happened, and instead follow the thread of creation it offers. This is not resignation; it is a profound pragmatism. The bereaved artist discovers that the best work comes not from solving the grief but from stepping aside and allowing the material to move through them. Bhakti teaches this as spiritual practice and psychological necessity.

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