A meditative and emotional practice of consciously dissolving rigid self-protection in anticipatory grief, following Mirabai's surrender to overwhelm.
Mirabai's poetry is soaked in dissolution—she melts, she drowns, she becomes undone in love. Her examined heart was not defended; it was porous, vulnerable, permeable to both ecstasy and devastation. The heart's dissolution practice for anticipatory grief involves intentional softening: allowing ourselves to feel the full weight of what may be lost, rather than bracing against it. This is not indulgence; it is precision. When we dissolve our defensive barriers in controlled practice, we develop capacity. We find that we can hold both grief and joy, both loss and gratitude, without fragmenting. Mirabai's model suggests that the examined heart becomes more resilient through dissolution, not despite it. By practice-dissolving our defenses in meditation or contemplation, we prepare ourselves for the genuine dissolutions that life will demand, meeting them with grace rather than collapse.
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