Moments when grief's intensity dissolves the separate self, offering paradoxical peace within suffering's depths.
Sufi and bhakti mysticism both reference fana—the dissolution of ego boundaries in union with the divine. Mirabai's most ecstatic moments involved a kind of self-forgetting in devotion. Applied to grief, this concept addresses those rare, overwhelming waves where sorrow becomes so total that the griever stops resisting it and momentarily merges with it—a paradoxical state of both maximum pain and unexpected peace. In these moments, the boundaries between self and loss, lover and beloved, dissolve. What felt like drowning becomes, strangely, a kind of rest. Modern psychology might call this dissociation; bhakti wisdom recognizes it as a threshold experience where the examined heart glimpses something beyond its usual boundaries. These moments are neither to be sought nor feared. They come unbidden as grace, reminding grievers that even in non-linear sorrow's most intense waves, there exists a depth that transcends ordinary suffering—a place where grief and love become indistinguishable.
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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