Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Nidhi-Tyag: Releasing Possessiveness of Grief

Nidhi-tyag is the practice of relinquishing possessive claims on grief, recognizing loss as shared and releasing attachment to one's personal narrative.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai was celebrated for her renunciation—nidhi-tyag, the release of possession and ego. Applied to collective grief, this principle addresses a subtle shadow: the tendency to cling to grief as identity, to possess a tragedy as one's private loss, or to compete for the most authentic right to mourn. Nidhi-tyag invites communities to grieve while simultaneously releasing their grip on that grief. This means acknowledging that others may mourn differently or more intensely; it means resisting the urge to gatekeep loss; it means understanding that grief's purpose is not to elevate the self but to honor the other. Nidhi-tyag is particularly important in collective mourning, where media and social narratives can exploit grief for engagement. By practicing release, communities mourn more freely. The examined heart asks: How am I using grief? What am I clinging to, and what would it mean to let go?

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Mira
Love & Relationships
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