A contemplative practice of naming and honoring each identity you've inhabited, creating internal space where your old self is witnessed rather than erased.
Mirabai renounced her name as princess, wife, widow—yet her poetry doesn't deny those selves; it grieves them consciously. This practice invites you to create an internal chamber where each former identity has a place: the child you were, the person in that relationship, the professional you embodied, the believer you no longer are. Name them. Write them down. Acknowledge what each version carried—gifts, wounds, purposes now obsolete. Rather than pretending transformation erased the past, bhakti teaches that love holds all of it. By housing these names consciously, you prevent them from haunting you as ghosts. They become ancestors within your own being, honored but released. This shifts grief from amputation into maturation.
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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