The practice of offering your anticipatory grief—your ache, your tears, your love—as itself a form of devotion and service.
Samarpana means offering or surrender—the act of giving what is most precious to the beloved. Mirabai offered everything: her reputation, her family, her body, her heart. She also offered her grief, transforming it into songs and service. Anticipatory grief often feels like a burden, a private ache you carry alone. Samarpana invites a reframe: this grief is an offering. It is proof that you have loved. It is a gift you are making—to the person, to the universe, to the examined heart within you. When you grieve someone while they live, you are saying: you matter so much that losing you wounds me now. You are offering your tears as incense, your ache as prayer. This transforms the emotional pain into a spiritual act. The examined heart discovers that anticipatory grief, fully accepted and offered, becomes a path of devotion as real as any ritual.
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