Tyaga—conscious renunciation—transforms involuntary loss into deliberate spiritual choice, converting passive grief into active freedom.
Tyaga means sacrifice or renunciation in Hindu philosophy, but it carries connotations of clarity and choice. Mirabai's life exemplified tyaga: she consciously renounced status, family approval, and conventional respectability. Unlike identity loss that happens to you—through aging, circumstance, or betrayal—tyaga is identity loss you choose. This distinction profoundly affects how grief manifests. When you renounce something deliberately, grief coexists with conviction; you mourn what you've released while affirming the choice itself. This creates a unique emotional texture: sorrow without bitterness, loss without victimhood. The grieving person who has renounced their former self can say, "I mourn who I was, and I don't want to return to being them." Tyaga reframes the examined heart as not merely introspective but decisively directional—you're not passively observing loss but actively consecrating it.
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.