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Concept
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Kshana-Vada: Moment-to-Moment Identity Emergence

Kshana-vada teaches that identity is not fixed across time but continuously created fresh in each moment of authentic choice.

Mira
Why It Matters

Kshana-vada is the Buddhist and yogic teaching that reality consists of discrete moments, each one arising new and unprecedented. Applied to identity, it means you are not the same person you were before, nor are you destined to remain whoever you became. Each moment offers fresh creation. Mirabai's radical freedom came partly from this understanding: she didn't carry forward the role of wife or noblewoman into the next moment; she chose anew each day. When you grieve who you were before, you're assuming continuity—that there's a fixed past-self whose loss you mourn. Kshana-vada interrupts this assumption. Yes, those experiences happened. Yes, you inhabited that identity. But that person is not continuing into this moment; they exist only in memory. The grief you feel is actually the friction between the memory of who you were and the present moment's invitation to create yourself anew. Each breath is a fresh beginning. By living kshana-vada, you honor the past without being imprisoned by it.

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