abandon oneself to

abandon (oneself) to

To allow oneself to enjoy something fully. On the chilly fall day, Maria abandoned herself to the comforts of hot tea and a warm blanket.
See also: abandon
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

abandon oneself to something

to yield to the comforts or delights of something. The children abandoned themselves to the delights of the warm summer day.
See also: abandon
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • abandon
  • abandon (oneself) to
  • abandon to
  • abandoned
  • kick (oneself) for (doing something)
  • selfie
  • wash one's hands of
  • wash your hands of
  • wash your hands of somebody/something
  • wash your hands of something/someone
References in periodicals archive
These manifestations can never contradict the content of faith and must, therefore, have their focus in the core of Christ's proclamation: the Father's love which leads men and women to conversion and bestows the grace required to abandon oneself to him with filial devotion.
This is evident in his writings, specifically in the claim that 'Poetry emerges by itself, and it suffices to abandon oneself to a dream state while painting in order to be able to express it.'
Most of the drama comes from the willingness to abandon oneself to the power of the movement."
To come out of one's self means to abandon oneself to Christ and entrust to him the solution of all problems.
To abandon oneself to Christ means to experience his dimensions, the first of which is Christ as the reality that explains everything.
Studzinsky says, "One must abandon oneself to God's providence and believe that because God is in charge, everything will be well." Many U.S.