The deliberate untethering from roles and identities you've outgrown, viewed as a spiritual act rather than a loss or failure.
Mirabai abandoned her role as a high-born wife and princess to pursue her devotional path, an act her society condemned as shameful disidentification. Yet she understood it as sacred liberation. This concept reframes the grief of lost identity as a necessary spiritual shedding—like a snake leaving its skin. When you grieve who you were, you may be grieving not a true loss but a false self finally recognized as insufficient. Sacred disidentification asks: which parts of your former identity are you grieving because they genuinely served your depth, and which are you grieving only because their loss disrupts your social standing? Mirabai's example shows that sometimes the examined heart must choose authenticity over belonging, and that choice, though painful, is a form of devotion to truth.
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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