Samarpana, the complete offering of oneself to the beloved, reveals how unconditional love paradoxically requires total vulnerability and surrender without guarantee of return.
Samarpana means offering or dedication; in bhakti, it is the gesture of placing everything—body, mind, will, reputation, security—at the feet of the beloved. Mirabai's life was samarpana: she abandoned family status, marriage, social propriety, and cast her lot entirely with Krishna. This was not codependence but conscious choice to love without a safety net. Samarpana teaches that genuine agape involves real risk and real loss; it cannot be hedged with conditions. Yet paradoxically, this absolute offering creates unsinkable joy and freedom. When you have nothing left to lose, when you've already surrendered all, fear dissolves. This mirrors Christian martyrdom, Islamic shahada (witnessing), and Sufi fana (annihilation of the ego-self). Samarpana is not a one-time gesture but a continuous practice: each moment asks, can I offer this too? Am I still holding back? For modern practitioners accustomed to risk management and self-protection, samarpana is radical. It doesn't advocate recklessness but invites examination: Where do I withhold myself? What would shift if I offered myself more fully? What am I protecting that serves no one?
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