Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Radical Simplification as Liberation

A practice of intentionally reducing dependencies and possessions to align with ecological reality and increase psychological resilience.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai lived with minimal possessions, renouncing the material complexity that bound others to social obligation. Radical simplification as liberation applies this to anticipatory grief: one response to the awareness that civilization may not sustain our current complexity is to voluntarily simplify before forced to do so. This is not ascetic punishment but liberation. Fewer possessions mean fewer anxieties, less environmental impact, increased self-sufficiency, and clearer perception of what genuinely supports flourishing. Simplification also practicallyorders our lives to be less brittle. The examined heart reveals which possessions are truly valued and which are burdensome. A simple life adapted to local ecology is far more resilient than a complex one dependent on global systems. This practice transforms anticipatory grief into action; instead of passive worry about collapse, we become active in reshaping our own dependencies. Mirabai's example shows that simplicity is not deprivation but freedom—freedom from maintenance, from status anxiety, from complexity that demands constant system-support. Simplification is both spiritual practice and pragmatic preparation.

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