A framework for understanding relationships with deceased loved ones as ongoing, dynamic, and worthy of deep emotional examination, mirroring Mirabai's intense personal relationship with the divine.
Mirabai's bhakti tradition centered on an examined, intimate relationship with Krishna—she knew him personally, questioned him, celebrated him, grieved his absence. African ancestors are similarly understood as present, relational, and responsive to living community members. Ancestor Presence as Examined Relationship rejects both denial and spiritualization of the dead. Instead, it invites mourners to continue the examined heart work with the deceased—understanding what the relationship meant, how it shaped identity, what remains unresolved. This framework acknowledges that ancestor veneration is not nostalgic fantasy but genuine relationship across dimensions. Community members might ask: Who was this person truly? How do I carry them forward? What would they want for me now? These examined questions deepen understanding of both the deceased and the griever. The practice honors African cosmology—where ancestors remain part of the living community—while validating the psychological reality of ongoing attachment and dialogue with those we have lost.
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