“Grief isn’t just about losing someone. It’s about realizing who never got to show up—and who you had to become to survive.”
Grief isn’t always about death.
Sometimes it’s about the absence of someone who’s still alive.
Or the absence of a version of yourself who never got to exist.
This week in our sangha, a student shared something so simple, it cracked our hearts open:
“I don’t just grieve my father’s presence.
I grieve that he never got to show up.
And I grieve the role I had to play… just to feel safe.”
In one sentence, they named a wound so many of us carry:
We became who we needed to be to survive.
The caretaker. The peacemaker. The therapist. The one who didn’t need too much.
And now, as adults, we wonder why we feel exhausted… disconnected… unseen.
In yogic terms, these roles are samskaras—deep imprints etched by necessity.
In Buddhist psychology, they are habitual identities formed by trauma and craving.
But in everyday life, they just feel like who we are.
Until we ask:
What if that version of me is not the whole me?
What if the grief I feel isn’t about someone I lost—
but someone I never got to be?
You feel sadness with no clear loss
You feel angry when others depend on you, but guilty when they don’t
You feel unseen even in “healthy” relationships
You crave rest but feel unworthy of it
You fear being a burden, even when you're breaking inside
Here’s the invitation:
Name the Role.
“I became the strong one.” “I became the fixer.” “I became the peacemaker.”
Ask: What did I lose to survive?
Maybe it was playfulness. Softness. Vulnerability.
Grieve it.
Not with shame—but with reverence. You survived. And now you get to live.
Create space for the original self to return.
The one who didn’t have to perform to belong.
“Grief is not a sign of weakness.
It is the price of admission for becoming whole.”
Let yourself grieve—not just the people you’ve lost,
but the parts of you that were never given a chance to be loved.
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there is Buddha.
- Milarepa
Milarepa (1052-1135 AD), a Tibetan yogi and poet, was a man who turned the trajectory of his life from misdeed to enlightenment, reminding us of the enduring potential of the human spirit.