Complete surrender of the outcome—their lifespan, suffering, and dying process—as the path to liberation from anticipatory anxiety and control.
Sharanagati in bhakti means radical surrender: placing yourself entirely in the hands of the divine. Mirabai surrendered her reputation, her family bonds, her safety—not in passivity but in active trust. In anticipatory grief, sharanagati is the hardest and most liberating practice: surrendering the outcome. You cannot determine their lifespan, ease their suffering, or control the dying process. The ego resists this fiercely; it wants to believe that worry, planning, and control matter. Sharanagati means acknowledging: "I am not in charge of this." This is devastating and freeing. When you truly surrender—not give up, but consciously release your illusory control—anxiety loosens. You become available to what is actually happening rather than trapped in what might happen. Mirabai's surrender made her free to love without condition. Your surrender in anticipatory grief makes you free to be present without the exhausting burden of preventing the inevitable.
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