The radical permeability of self that Mirabai modeled—grief as a dissolution of the separate self that opens to larger belonging and creative communion.
Mirabai's devotion to Krishna was so complete that the boundary between lover and beloved dissolved. She stopped being Mirabai and became Krishna's voice, Krishna's longing, Krishna's presence. This dissolution was not pathological but transcendent—a crossing into larger identity. Grief catalyzes similar boundary dissolution: we lose the other and in that loss, something in us that was defined by separation also dies. The framework here suggests that grief, fully entered, dissolves the illusion of the separate self. In this dissolution, we can find strange liberation: we are no longer only Miriam or Michael grieving Jessica. We become part of something larger—a lineage of the bereaved, a communion with those who have loved and lost. Our creative work, made from this permeable place, carries a resonance that only boundary-dissolved consciousness can access.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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