Using grief work to process the loss of romantic fantasy or freedom in arranged partnership, allowing authentic acceptance rather than resignation.
Mirabai grieved—separation from Krishna, her lost freedom, her family's rejection. Yet she moved through grief into deeper wisdom. In arranged marriages, grief often arrives unspoken: the loss of choosing your own partner, of certain life paths, of the romantic narrative you imagined. This concept reframes grief not as weakness but as essential emotional work. If you grieve the fantasy—the perfect love story you won't have, the autonomy you've negotiated away—you become available for the real relationship before you. Suppressed grief festers into resentment and numbness. Named grief, witnessed and felt, transforms. It's not about resignation or settling; it's about grieving one version of life so you can genuinely inhabit another. Mirabai's poetry holds both lament and joy simultaneously. She loved what she had lost while loving what remained. This emotional honesty allows arranged marriage partners to show up with authenticity rather than performing acceptance they don't feel.
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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