The spiritual goal of liberation through surrendering resistance to what's happening, finding freedom within grief rather than escape from it.
Moksha means liberation—traditionally conceived as freedom from the cycle of death and rebirth. But Mirabai's moksha came through total surrender to her devotion, not escape from it. In anticipatory grief, we often struggle most against what's real: the diagnosis, the timeline, the finality. This resistance creates a secondary suffering layered over primary grief. Moksha in the midst of dying means surrendering not the person, but the fight against reality. You can't prevent death, but you can stop exhausting yourself in denial. This surrender isn't passive resignation; it's active liberation. It frees energy from resistance and makes it available for presence, love, completion. Mirabai found freedom by leaning fully into her longing rather than fighting it. Similarly, when you accept that this person will die—that the loss is real and coming—you paradoxically become free to love them more fully now. Grief becomes not a prison but a path.
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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