Creating intentional spiritual communities where anticipatory grief is held collectively, preventing both isolation and collective delusion.
Mirabai was often alone, yet she was never truly solitary—she was in constant communion with the divine, and her songs reached others who recognized their own longing in her words. Anticipatory grief for civilization cannot be borne alone. We need what we might call a 'Beloved Community in Witness'—intentional groups where we can speak the unspeakable, grieve the ungrievable, and remain honest about what is happening without either drowning in despair or fleeing into false hope. These communities serve multiple functions: they prevent the pathologization of appropriate grief, they offer collective wisdom and resilience, they keep us accountable to truth, and they remind us that we are not alone in our perception. Such communities might take many forms—spiritual circles, grief councils, activist groups, or contemplative sanghas—but they share the commitment to staying present to reality together, to honoring each person's grief, and to supporting each other in choosing love as our response to loss.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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