Honoring the losses inherent in arranged partnerships—lost autonomy, unexpected partners, alternate futures—as gateways to liberation and deeper self-knowledge.
Mirabai knew profound grief: her arranged marriage separated her from her beloved Krishna-worship, yet she grieved openly and transformed sorrow into transcendence. In family-mediated partnerships, grief often remains unspoken—the loss of choice, the partner you didn't select, the life you imagined. This concept reframes grief not as weakness but as essential truth-telling. When you fully acknowledge what was taken or what you mourn, you reclaim agency. Unexamined grief becomes resentment; examined grief becomes freedom. Partners who allow themselves to grieve—not to punish each other, but to honor reality—can move beyond victim consciousness. This grieving process creates space for new attachments to form, for acceptance to emerge, or for clear decisions about the relationship's future. The heart that grieves authentically is the heart that can choose freely.
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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