Rigorous self-inquiry into our own complicity and attachment, drawing on Mirabai's unflinching introspection about desire, freedom, and belonging.
Mirabai's practice was not merely devotion but relentless self-examination: she questioned her social role, her loyalties, her desires, her capacity for freedom. The examined heart—a term that threads through her poetry—is the practice of looking honestly at our own contradictions without flinching. Applied to anticipatory grief, this means asking: Where do I contribute to the systems I mourn? What comforts am I unwilling to release? How does my grief serve my identity? What liberation might come if I stopped defending my role in what I am losing? This is not shame-based but clarifying. By examining our own hearts—our complicity, our attachments, our fears—we become capable of authentic grief rather than performative sorrow. We distinguish between genuine transformation and ego-protective narratives. The examined heart is the only foundation from which real anticipatory grief can emerge: grief that changes us rather than confirms what we already believe about ourselves.
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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