Moksha—liberation—is the ultimate freedom that grief, fully felt and channeled creatively, can provide from what no longer serves you.
Moksha, liberation, is the ultimate aim of Hindu philosophy—freedom from cycles of suffering, from illusion, from what binds you. Mirabai, through her devotion and surrender, sought and achieved a kind of moksha; she was liberated from social convention, from shame, from the need for approval. Grief, paradoxically, can be a vehicle for moksha. When you lose something or someone, you lose an illusion about how life should be. You are liberated, whether you like it or not, from attachment to a particular future. This can be devastating or it can be the beginning of freedom. Creative work in the fire of grief can burn away what is false in you—pretense, performance, old stories about who you are supposed to be. Moksha is not about floating above your life but about being so fully present to what is real that freedom emerges naturally. This concept invites you to ask: What am I being freed from through this loss? What old self, old patterns, old identities are being released? What authentic freedom might be available on the other side of grief if I move through it consciously and creatively?
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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