The concept of nirmama-sakti—the power of non-possession—which teaches that what we grieve was never truly ours, freeing us to love and create without desperate clinging.
Nirmama means "without mine-ness"; it's the realization that nothing ultimately belongs to us. Mirabai was married but considered herself married only to the divine, freeing herself from possessive attachment to any human relationship. This doesn't diminish love; rather, it clarifies it. We suffer in grief partly because we clung to ownership: "my life," "my person," "my time." Nirmama-sakti teaches us to love fiercely while holding loosely. This paradox is crucial for creative work after loss. When we release the delusion that we ever owned what we've lost, we stop grieving it as theft and begin seeing it as a gift whose season has passed. This shift changes the quality of our making. Art created from nirmama-sakti carries less desperation and more grace. We're not trying to resurrect the past or prove our right to it; we're creating from the abundance of having had it at all, even temporarily.
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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