Periagoge
Concept
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Kshana: The Eternal Moment

The practice of fully inhabiting the present moment as sanctuary and resistance to both nostalgia and catastrophic futures.

Mira
Why It Matters

Kshana—the eternal moment—emerges in bhakti meditation as a collapse of time into pure presence. Mirabai's spiritual practice wasn't about transcending the world or grasping the future; it was about the radiant fullness of now. For anticipatory grief, this offers crucial ballast. Civilization's trajectory pulls us backward (what have we lost?) and forward (what will we lose?). Kshana practice asks: what is actually available to me in this moment? What is alive right now? This doesn't deny genuine loss or real threat; rather, it insists that the present moment contains resources—beauty, connection, possibility—that catastrophic thinking often obscures. The bhakti saint knows that the beloved is most accessible in the present, not in past wholeness or future restoration. For those grieving civilization, kshana becomes both medicine and clarity-bringer.

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