Understanding the deep mental patterns and conditioning (samskaras) that shaped your former identity as impressions you're learning to unwrite.
In yogic philosophy, samskaras are mental impressions, grooves of conditioning carved into consciousness through repetition. Your former identity was built from countless samskaras: how you walked, spoke, thought, and felt within particular constraints. Grief for lost identity often means grief for these embodied patterns—even when you consciously chose to change them. Mirabai's renunciation required unwriting years of court etiquette, royal bearing, and socially-conditioned responses. This concept reframes your grief as the natural discomfort of samskaras being released. Like muscles held in tension for years finally relaxing, the dissolution of old patterns creates a strange ache. Recognizing these as mere impressions—not your essence—allows you to grieve them without believing you've lost yourself. You're simply becoming someone whose samskaras align with truth.
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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