Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Tenderness Toward Your Former Self

Rather than dismissing or judging who you were, bhakti teaches regarding your lost identity with compassion and love.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai didn't condemn or reject her former self as princess and dutiful daughter-in-law; she honored that role even as she transcended it. This concept addresses a hidden danger in grief for lost identity: the tendency to become harsh with yourself for who you were. You may judge your former self as naive, weak, inauthentic, or foolish—inflicting secondary grief on top of primary loss. Bhakti wisdom offers tenderness instead. Your former identity was real. The person you were was doing their best with the consciousness, resources, and circumstances they had. That person deserves your compassion, not your contempt. This tender regard doesn't mean claiming that former identity was your true self or that you should return to it. It means treating the memory of who you were with the gentleness you would offer a beloved person who no longer walks your path. This tenderness paradoxically helps you release that identity more fully. When you stop fighting against your former self, mourning it, or judging it, you can finally let it rest. What would change if you approached your lost identity with the same love Mirabai held for Krishna—seeing it as sacred, even as it fades?

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