The practice of consciously offering one's grief, pain, and creative work as devotional gift rather than burden.
Samarpan means complete offering, dedication, surrender. In bhakti practice, even suffering is offered to the divine with love. Mirabai transformed her heartbreak into offerings—songs laid at Krishna's feet, verses that asked for nothing but to speak truth and beauty. This reframe is revolutionary for grief work: instead of carrying loss as private burden or therapy project, samarpan invites you to offer it. Offer your grief to art, to community, to what you love. Offer the story to those who need to hear it. Offer the painting, the poem, the music—not to earn validation but as pure gift. This practice dissolves the boundary between personal healing and creative generosity. Your grief becomes not your possession but your offering, and in that transformation, it gains purpose and meaning beyond itself.
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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