Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Seva: Service as Meaning-Making in Dissolution

Selfless action directed toward alleviating suffering and tending to what remains, disconnected from guaranteed outcomes.

Mira
Why It Matters

Seva—selfless service—is central to bhakti practice. Mirabai served through music, dance, and presence; she did not require that her service preserve the social order or guarantee success. For anticipatory grief, seva becomes the practice of meaningful action that is not dependent on preventing civilizational change. What can you tend? What suffering can you alleviate? What can you repair, protect, or nurture, knowing it may not endure? Seva prevents anticipatory grief from becoming paralysis. It acknowledges that we cannot control outcomes but we can direct our attention and energy toward what matters. This might mean local environmental restoration, community care, preservation of knowledge, or witness to beauty. Seva asks: what love can I offer with my hands and presence right now? This practice transforms grief into purposeful engagement. It also aligns us with what bhakti knows: that service itself—not its results—is the point. Through seva, we become part of what endures: the lineage of those who chose care.

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