An internal companionship that observes your grief without judgment, drawing from bhakti's vision of the soul as witness to its own transformation.
In bhakti poetry, the sakhi is the beloved's female companion, confidante, and witness. Mirabai speaks to her sakhis, creating an internal community within consciousness. When grieving lost identity, you need a sakhi within—a compassionate witness to your transformation that neither clings to who you were nor rushes toward who you'll become. This sakhi aspect of consciousness holds space for the liminal zone where old identity dissolves and new self hasn't yet crystallized. Mirabai's sakhis in her poems represent the part of her that understood both her duty and her longing, honoring the validity of both even as she chose differently. Cultivating your inner sakhi means developing a relationship with the witnessing awareness that observes your grief with tender presence. This witness doesn't fix or explain away your loss; it simply says: I see you, your sorrow is real, and you are not alone in this passage.
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