Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Shedding the Constructed Self

A deliberate process of releasing the identity you built to please others, following Mirabai's radical renunciation of social expectation.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai abandoned her husband, her caste, her role as a dutiful wife—the identity the world expected her to maintain. Her grief was not for who she was, but for the false self she could no longer bear to perform. This concept applies directly to anyone grieving a lost identity: much of what you mourn was constructed to meet external demands. Shedding the constructed self is not becoming a blank slate; it's consciously removing layers of conditioning, obligation, and borrowed purpose. Mirabai's example shows this is sacred work, not selfish abandonment. She didn't grieve her lost status; she grieved what the status cost her soul. By identifying which parts of your lost identity were authentic and which were performance, you can grieve only what deserves mourning. The rest releases like constraints you no longer need. This creates space for a self that was always present but concealed beneath the version others required.

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