A contemplative practice that treats civilization (as system, culture, and interdependent whole) as a beloved whose decline we must witness and mourn.
In Mirabai's devotion, Krishna is simultaneously infinitely transcendent and intimately present—the beloved one whose closeness cannot be achieved but whose presence suffuses everything. This creates a paradoxical relationship: the beloved is real and irreplaceable, yet the relationship is defined by absence and longing rather than possession or security. Applying this framework to civilization, we can learn to love it—this complex, beautiful, destructive, creative system that has produced both ecological crisis and human genius—with the clarity of devotional attention. This means neither idealizing civilization as wholly good nor dismissing it as wholly evil, but maintaining the kind of clear-eyed, grieving love Mirabai held for Krishna. This practice means asking: What do I genuinely love about this civilization? What is being lost that deserves mourning? How can I hold both its beauty and its failures in the same heart? By learning to love civilization as Mirabai loved her absent beloved—fully, without demand for different outcomes, with full attention to its complexity—we develop the emotional maturity that anticipatory grief requires.
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