Moksha—liberation—is not escape from grief but freedom found through the act of transforming pain into beauty, loss into legacy and meaning.
In Hindu philosophy, moksha is liberation from the cycle of suffering through knowledge, devotion, or action. Mirabai sought moksha through bhakti—through total devotion to Krishna. For those grieving, moksha through making means finding freedom not by moving past grief but by moving through it into creation. You are liberated when the loss becomes a teacher, when the pain becomes purposeful, when your hands and heart are engaged in work that honors what was. Moksha in this context is not transcendence but transfiguration: the grief remains real, but it is no longer solely destructive. It has become generative. The legacy of the person you lost lives in what you make. Their influence continues through your creative work. This is liberation: not being free from grief, but being free within it, knowing that your sorrow has become something that nourishes others, that matters, that will outlast you. Creativity is the moksha that transforms an ending into a beginning.
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