Moksha-oriented understanding that grieving teaches the ultimate reality of change, leading to spiritual liberation and freedom from attachment.
Mirabai chose freedom—renouncing social convention to pursue her devotion. In Hindu grief practice, a parallel freedom emerges: the recognition that all forms are temporary. Antyesti and shraddha, when understood deeply, are teachings in impermanence. The body returns to ash, the person we knew transforms into memory and ancestor. Rather than resist this truth, the examined griever embraces it, finding strange liberation in acceptance. This is not fatalism but realism grounded in Vedantic wisdom. Mirabai's own detachment from worldly ties mirrors the griever's necessary release. Yet this release need not be cold; it is suffused with love. By accepting that all relationships transform, that death is not aberration but natural passage, mourners free themselves from the desperate clinging that prolongs suffering. Antyesti and shraddha become pathways to moksha—freedom through clear seeing.
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