Samarpan means total self-offering or surrender; a practice of ritually releasing your former identity through conscious gift-giving rather than denial.
Samarpan is the act of complete offering—surrendering what you hold most dear to something larger than yourself. Mirabai practiced samarpan by offering everything: her marriage, her status, her family bonds, all in service to her devotional path. Samarpan is different from loss because it contains intention and meaning. When you grieve identity loss passively, you're a victim; when you practice samarpan, you consciously choose what you're releasing and to what purpose. A samarpan practice for identity grief might involve a ritual: writing down qualities, roles, and identities you've lost, then consciously offering them—to the future, to others who may benefit, to the unknown becoming. This transforms passive grief into active spiritual practice. You acknowledge: I am releasing this not because I'm forced to, but because I choose to devote my authentic self to what matters most. Samarpan reframes loss as sacrifice, which restores agency and meaning.
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