Paradoxical freedom found through surrendering to grief rather than resisting it, rooted in Mirabai's devotional surrender to loss.
Mirabai's life embodied a radical surrender—to love, to loss, to the absence of her divine beloved. This surrender, far from being a defeat, became her greatest liberation. She was freed from social expectation, from the prison of her marriage, from the need to control outcomes. In collective grief, surrender operates similarly: we are freed from the exhausting effort to suppress, rationalize, or 'move on' from loss before its time. When we surrender to grief—allow it to break us open, to teach us, to change us—we paradoxically find freedom. We are released from the shame of feeling too much, the guilt of feeling too little. We are freed to honor what mattered. This surrender is not passivity but active acceptance of what is true. It creates psychological and spiritual space for genuine processing, integration, and eventual healing that resistance cannot achieve.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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