Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Freedom Through Surrender to Loss

The paradoxical liberation that comes from ceasing resistance to grief and instead surrendering completely to the reality of absence.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai abandoned palace and family to pursue Krishna, an act of radical surrender that freed her from all other claims and obligations. This same liberation is what effective grief rituals accomplish: they create sacred permission to surrender to what cannot be changed. In Japanese Zen funeral rites, the chanting of sutras embodies acceptance of impermanence—not resignation but clear-eyed recognition. The Islamic funeral's immediate burial reflects this same principle: the body returns to earth swiftly, and resistance is futile. Yet paradoxically, this surrender brings freedom. The griever who fights the reality of death remains trapped in "if only" and magical thinking. The griever who ritually surrenders—through the structured movements of sitting shiva, the ceremonial washing of Islamic ghusl, the vigil at a Christian deathbed—suddenly finds themselves free from the exhausting effort of denial. Mirabai's freedom came through accepting her love for Krishna would never be requited in conventional ways. Similarly, grieving cultures accomplish a strange liberation: by fully accepting loss, they free themselves to love the memory without demand, to continue relationship transformed.

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