Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Ecstatic as Anchor

Cultivating moments of genuine joy and beauty to ground us when grief threatens to overwhelm.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's devotion was not grim or ascetic; she sang, she danced, she was transported by music and divine presence. Her ecstasy was not escape from reality but full presence to it, including its pain. For those carrying anticipatory grief, the trap is a kind of permanent heaviness—the belief that to grieve properly, we must renounce beauty and joy. Mirabai teaches otherwise. She shows that ecstatic experience—whether through art, nature, connection, or spiritual practice—is not frivolous but essential. These moments of genuine aliveness are anchors that prevent us from being entirely consumed by what we're losing. They remind us why the loss matters. They restore capacity for love and commitment. The practice is deliberate: seeking and savoring moments of genuine beauty, connection, or transcendence not as distraction but as ballast. Without this grounding in what is alive and precious, grief becomes abstract and paralyzing. With it, grief becomes the price we pay for loving what is real.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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