Practicing spiritual surrender—releasing resistance to grief's reality—as distinct from passivity, enabling deeper healing and meaning-making.
Mirabai's devotion involved profound surrender: releasing her own will to align with something larger, accepting separation from her beloved as part of spiritual truth. This surrender wasn't weakness but the highest strength. In collective grief, we often resist the reality of loss through denial, anger, or premature closure. We rush toward meaning-making or action to avoid sitting with powerlessness. Mirabai teaches that surrender—truly accepting that this person is gone, that we cannot control tragedy, that suffering exists—opens us to deeper transformation. When we stop fighting reality and instead bow to it, we can begin genuine mourning. This surrender creates space for authentic questioning: What does this loss ask of us? How are we changed? What matters now? For public grief, this means resisting the rush to silver linings and learning. First, we surrender to the rawness of loss itself.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.