Mirabai's radical rejection of her expected role reveals how grief for lost identity begins with recognizing the self you performed was never truly yours.
Mirabai abandoned her identity as a princess and dutiful wife to pursue devotion to Krishna, illustrating the bhakti principle that the constructed self—shaped by family, caste, and expectation—must dissolve. This concept names the paradox of identity grief: what we mourn losing may never have been authentically ours. The false self is the identity imposed by others' demands, social conditioning, and fear-based compliance. Grief for lost identity often masks relief at the death of this impostor. Mirabai's tradition teaches that this dissolution is not tragedy but liberation, the necessary clearing away of borrowed skin. Examining which parts of your former identity were genuine versus performed opens space for authentic reconstruction rather than mere restoration of the false.
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