Wise release of attachments and securities that may not survive, practiced with consciousness rather than resignation.
Sang tyag—renunciation of worldly attachments—is a classical Hindu practice that Mirabai embodied radically, abandoning family status and conventional security for devotion. This concept reframes anticipatory grief as an invitation to practice conscious release. Rather than waiting for loss to happen to us, sang tyag teaches us to examine what we cling to and why. Which securities are illusions anyway? Which attachments prevent us from responding wisely to change? Mirabai's renunciation was not passive resignation but active choice grounded in clarity about what truly matters. For civilization, sang tyag becomes a practice of releasing attachments to specific outcomes, to comfortable continuity, to the assumption that modern comforts are permanent. This creates psychological freedom and adaptability. It redirects energy from defending the indefensible toward investing in what can genuinely be protected and nurtured. Anticipatory grief, met with sang tyag, becomes liberation.
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