Mirabai's progressive surrender of social position, family approval, and security as a path to paradoxical freedom that transforms grief's powerlessness into liberation.
Mirabai lost everything: her husband, her position, her family's support, her reputation, her security. And in losing everything, she found freedom. This is the paradox that transforms the rage underneath grief. Much of our anger comes from trying to protect what we believe we cannot afford to lose. We hold onto relationships that harm us, identities that constrain us, positions that diminish us—because losing them feels like death. But Mirabai's life teaches that there is a threshold. When we have truly lost everything we feared losing, something unexpected happens: we become free. The rage transforms into clarity. The grief becomes spacious. This concept does not celebrate loss or counsel recklessness, but it recognizes that sometimes grief and anger are invitations to examine what we are gripping so tightly. What would change if this were already gone? What is the freedom that might be available on the other side of this loss? Mirabai's path suggests that the deepest freedom comes not from controlling outcomes but from surrendering our grip.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.