Moksha is liberation or freedom from cycles of suffering; through creative expression, grief becomes the pathway to genuine freedom and spiritual emancipation.
Moksha—liberation, freedom from cycles of suffering—is traditionally a spiritual goal in Hindu philosophy. Mirabai achieved a form of moksha through her devotion and artistic expression: she transcended social convention, family expectation, and the fear of death by anchoring herself in love and creativity. Her moksha was unconventional—not withdrawal from life but radical engagement with it through song and dance. In contemporary grief work, this suggests that freedom does not mean forgetting or detaching from loss. Instead, genuine liberation comes through fully experiencing grief, expressing it authentically, and allowing it to transform us. The creative act itself becomes liberatory: when we make art from our sorrow, we reclaim agency. We are no longer passive victims of loss but active creators of meaning. Moksha through expression means discovering that the very pain we feared would destroy us becomes the doorway to freedom, authenticity, and a life lived more fully and consciously.
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