The intentional practice of letting go that transforms involuntary loss into conscious choice, honoring both the grief and your power.
Tyaga means renunciation or release—the conscious, deliberate letting go that turns loss into spiritual practice. Unlike involuntary loss, tyaga empowers you by making surrender an active choice. Mirabai exemplified tyaga by consciously renouncing her crown, her marriage, her family's expectations, and her reputation. Though some of these losses were forced, she transformed them through tyaga: she chose the meaning of her losses by deliberately releasing any resistance to them. This concept applies when you're grieving an identity loss that feels involuntary. Tyaga invites you to ask: Can I consciously choose to release what's already gone? Can I renounce my claim to that former self, not because it's taken from me, but because I actively release it? This shifts the narrative from victimhood to agency. Tyaga isn't about pretending the loss didn't hurt or that you wanted it. It's about consciously stepping beyond the loss rather than remaining trapped in it. The practice honors both the reality of grief and your capacity for active participation in your own becoming. By choosing renunciation, you reclaim dignity and power in the face of identity dissolution.
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