Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Freedom Through Renunciation: Grieving What Must Be Released

The liberation achieved by consciously releasing attachments through grief rituals, enabling genuine freedom.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai rejected conventional life—marriage, status, security—to pursue her devotion, modeling a radical freedom born from renunciation. Grief rituals across cultures accomplish a similar liberation: by consciously releasing attachment to the deceased in their earthly form, mourners achieve freedom from possessive longing. In Buddhist funeral practices, the ritual explicitly supports the deceased's release from earthly bonds. In Hindu shraddha rites performed annually, the living gradually release their grip on the departed. In Mexican Día de Muertos, honoring the dead's journey beyond life permits the living to let them go. Mirabai teaches that attachment without acceptance becomes bondage; grief rituals accomplish the paradoxical work of deepening love while loosening grip. By creating sacred structures for consciously releasing the deceased, these rituals free both the dead and the living—the dead to their spiritual journey, the living to continue their own transformation without the weight of unresolved longing.

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