Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Aniruddha and the Invisible Presence

The paradox that a beloved figure continues to touch us after death through memory, work, and the hearts they changed.

Mira
Why It Matters

In Mirabai's devotion to Krishna, the beloved was simultaneously absent (she never met him in earthly form) and intensely present (in every moment of her life and poetry). This dynamic—the invisible presence—governed her spiritual practice. When a public figure dies, we lose their literal presence but gain a different kind of presence: their words live on, their influence circulates, the people they touched carry them forward. Collective grief contains this paradox: genuine mourning for absence alongside recognition of a new form of presence. The examined heart learns to relate to the departed as Mirabai did to Krishna—not through physical meeting but through constant internal dialogue, through the works they left, through the communities they gathered. This bhakti understanding helps prevent both denial (pretending they're still here) and abandonment (letting them disappear into history). Instead, the departed become ancestors of consciousness, continuously present in how we think, feel, and act. Collective mourning can honor this continuing presence.

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