A grief practice grounded in Bhakti devotion where children maintain connection with the deceased through loving attention rather than denial or detachment.
Central to Mirabai's spirituality was her intense devotion to Krishna as an absent beloved—present in longing, memory, and imagination. She didn't deny his absence; she deepened her relationship with it. The Beloved Absence Meditation adapts this for children: sitting quietly with a memory of the person who died, holding them in consciousness with tenderness rather than trying to fix the pain or "let go." A child might recall a specific moment—a laugh, a recipe, a shared joke—and rest in the feeling of that presence. This differs from rumination or obsession; it's intentional, loving remembrance. Over time, such practice transforms relationship: the person remains alive in the child's inner world, available for consultation, comfort, and love. The child learns that love doesn't end with death; it changes form. This honors both the reality of loss and the continuity of connection.
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