Honest self-inquiry into what remains unsaid, undone, or unhealed between you and the dying person.
Mirabai's spiritual practice demanded rigorous self-examination—questioning attachment, desire, and the barriers between self and beloved. Applied to anticipatory grief, this becomes an inventory of the unexamined. What conversations have you avoided? What apologies linger? What affections go unspoken? The examined heart doesn't ignore these gaps; it names them. This isn't about guilt but clarity. Anticipatory grief often amplifies these unfinished threads because the mind rehearses loss while ignoring the present opportunity. By examining what's incomplete—resentments, gratitude unexpressed, forgiveness withheld—you create space to act. Mirabai's devotion was fierce partly because she refused false peace; she brought her full, complicated self to her relationship with the divine. Similarly, examining your heart with this person allows for authentic reconciliation, not avoidance disguised as acceptance.
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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