The practice of sannyasa (renunciation) applied to anticipatory grief: releasing your need to control the outcome, timeline, or how the person should experience their condition.
Sannyasa, renunciation, was central to Mirabai's freedom. She renounced family obligation, social status, and the demand that others understand her. In doing so, she discovered not emptiness but immense liberty. For anticipatory grief, sannyasa means consciously releasing the illusion that you can prevent loss or control how it unfolds. Much anticipatory grief is powered by magical thinking: if I prepare enough, anticipate enough, control enough variables, I can protect them or soften the blow. Sannyasa is the honest acknowledgment that you cannot. This is not passive despair but active release. You stop trying to bargain with the universe or perfect your caretaking to earn a reprieve. Instead, you accept the fundamental groundlessness of all relationships and focus on what is genuinely in your power: your presence, your words, your choices about how to show up. This paradoxically brings peace—not because the loss stops hurting but because you stop wasting energy fighting what you cannot change.
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