Tyaga is sacred renunciation—not rejection but conscious release of what no longer serves, as Mirabai released courtly identity for devotional truth.
Tyaga means renunciation, but Mirabai practiced it radically: she released her husband's name, her royal status, her family's demands, choosing instead the name of Krishna. Tyaga is not bitter rejection; it's the deliberate, even joyful release of identities that were never truly yours. When you grieve lost identity, tyaga asks: was this self authentic, or performed? What must be renounced for authenticity to emerge? Mirabai's tyaga teaches that sometimes losing identity is actually gaining freedom. This is the courage to say 'I was not myself then.' By consciously renouncing false identities—the pleaser, the dutiful daughter, the success-seeker—you create space for genuine self-discovery. Tyaga transforms grief from passive loss into active liberation, recognizing that what you're losing was never your true possession.
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