The bhakti virtue of trust and faith—holding faith in your unfolding self even when you cannot see the next chapter after loss.
Shraddha, often translated as faith or trust, is not blind belief but a lived conviction in the trustworthiness of existence itself. Mirabai embodied shraddha: she had no certainty about where her radical path would lead, no guarantee of safety or acceptance, yet she moved forward with devotion and trust. When grieving lost identity, shraddha becomes essential. You don't know who you will become; you cannot see the endpoint of your transformation. This not-knowing can feel terrifying. Yet shraddha asks you to trust the process, to have faith that your grief serves a purpose, that your former self's dissolution is not meaningless destruction but necessary alchemy. Shraddha is not passivity; it's active trust paired with devotion to your own unfolding. Mirabai teaches that faith doesn't require answers—it requires willingness to continue moving, singing, loving even in uncertainty. When you grieve lost identity, shraddha invites you to trust that the person you are becoming is worth the pain of who you were ceasing to be. This faith itself becomes a bridge.
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