Paradoxical liberation that arises when mourners surrender control and accept the reality of separation, releasing false hopes and grasping.
Mirabai abandoned social expectation, family pressure, and the illusion of a conventional life to serve Krishna—and found radical freedom in this surrender. Similarly, shiva demands that mourners relinquish control: you cannot bargain with death, restore the lost person, or hurry your grief. The structure of shiva—sitting, refraining from work, reciting prayers—trains the heart in this surrender. Rather than fighting the unchangeable, mourners move with it. This freedom is not happiness but liberation from the exhausting effort to deny reality. Yahrzeit observance extends this teaching: each anniversary invites renewed surrender to the fact of absence, which paradoxically deepens presence. Mirabai teaches that freedom lives not in refusing pain but in loving so deeply that all boundaries dissolve.
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