A framework integrating surrender (acceptance of what cannot be controlled) with fierce engagement (responsibility for what can be influenced).
Mirabai's path required surrendering to what she could not change—her family's expectations, social judgment, the mystery of divine presence—while fiercely pursuing what mattered to her. The paradox of surrender offers a sophisticated stance for civilizational work. We surrender to the reality that we cannot control global systems, cannot guarantee outcomes, cannot restore what is already lost. Simultaneously, we engage with full intensity in what is within our sphere of influence: our choices, our community, our work, our presence. This both/and stance prevents the twin traps of paralyzed despair and grandiose saviorism. Anticipatory civilizational grief flourishes when we stop demanding that we single-handedly prevent collapse, and instead ask: Where am I called to serve? What is mine to do? Surrender clarifies responsibility rather than erasing it.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.