Tapasya reframes your voluntary letting-go of false identity as a powerful discipline that strengthens your authentic self.
Tapasya means heat, austerity, or disciplined practice—voluntary hardship undertaken for spiritual purification and transformation. Mirabai chose tapasya: renouncing luxury, family approval, and social standing to follow her devotional truth. The grief of losing your former identity becomes tapasya when you choose it consciously rather than experiencing it as victimhood. This distinction is crucial. You're not passively mourning who you were; you're actively practicing the discipline of unbecoming. Tapasya has heat—it requires effort, courage, and persistence. It's the willingness to sit with discomfort rather than grasp for the old identity. By naming your grief-work as tapasya, you honor both its difficulty and your agency. You're not broken by loss; you're being refined by conscious choice. This practice strengthens your capacity to stay authentic even when the old identity calls you back, even when grief tempts you to resume what feels familiar.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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