Recognizing that identity loss grief is an invitation to develop a genuine, unconditional relationship with yourself rather than a performance-based one.
Mirabai's relationship with Krishna was unmediated—not performed for witnesses, not conditional on reciprocation, not dependent on external validation. When you grieve your former identity, you have an opportunity to develop this quality of self-relationship: unconditional, genuine, self-knowing. Your old identity may have been partly built on conditional self-regard—'I'm worthy if I achieve this, if others approve, if I maintain this role.' The loss of that identity strips away these conditions and asks: can you regard yourself with the same devotional attention Mirabai gave to Krishna? Can you value your existence independent of performance? This grief is therefore a gateway—a threshold where you transition from conditional, external self-definition to unconditional self-knowledge. It's not the easier path, but it's the authentic one. As you grieve who you performed being, you have the rare opportunity to build genuine intimacy with who you actually are. The grief becomes purposeful: it's the dissolution of illusion necessary for authentic relating with yourself.
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