Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Tyaga: The Liberating Power of Renunciation

A practice of consciously releasing what no longer serves you, using Mirabai's model of radical freedom through letting go.

Mira
Why It Matters

Tyaga means renunciation or sacrifice—not ascetic denial, but conscious choice to release what binds you. Mirabai renounced family, caste, respectability, and marriage to follow her devotion. Her renunciation was not passive withdrawal but active liberation. Beneath unexpressed grief and rage often lies an inability to let go: of how things should have been, of who hurt you, of the identity you lost. You grip these things while simultaneously hating them, creating the internal torture of contradictory desires. Tyaga invites a different approach: What would it mean to consciously release this attachment, not because it is noble but because holding it is depleting you? This is not forgiveness of harm, but freedom from the fantasy that suffering will restore what was lost. Mirabai teaches that renunciation opens space for genuine devotion—to what you love rather than what you rage against. By practicing tyaga with the stories you've made from your wound, you reclaim the energy trapped in anger.

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