Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Grief as Refusal of Forgetting

Honoring grief for lost identity as a form of respect, ensuring that who you were is genuinely integrated rather than abandoned or erased.

Mira
Why It Matters

There is a subtle danger in relinquishing identity: the temptation to erase what was, to pretend your former self never mattered or was entirely false. Mirabai did not do this. Her poetry remembers her wedding night, her palace gardens, her human relationships. She grieved not by forgetting but by honoring what was real in her previous life while choosing something different. The examined heart practices this nuanced grief: you can release an identity without erasing it, can grieve who you were without claiming that person was never truly you. This is the integration that makes transformation genuine rather than reactive rejection. Grief as refusal of forgetting means saying: I was really a princess, I was really devoted to family duty, I was really constrained—and I am choosing something different now, honoring all of it. When you integrate rather than obliterate your former identity, it becomes wisdom instead of wound. Mirabai's freedom was not escape but evolution, carrying all her years forward with conscious love for every version of herself.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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