Mirabai's simultaneous experience of Krishna as beloved and absent models how young people can hold both cherishing memory and accepting loss.
For Mirabai, Krishna was always the beloved—fully worthy of her love, fully deserving of her devotion—while also mysteriously absent. She never demanded that her love make sense or be reciprocated in expected ways. For young people, this concept helps navigate the tender ground between idealization and reality. Grief often includes complicated feelings: loving someone deeply while also remembering their flaws, cherishing memories while being angry at their death or at them for choices they made. The framework of holding both the beloved and the lost permits this complexity. Young people can say: "I loved them, and our relationship was difficult," or "I miss them, and I'm relieved," or "They were imperfect, and they mattered infinitely." Mirabai's unconditional love offers a model not of denial but of love that transcends need for the object to be flawless or present. This frees young people from the burden of maintaining a perfect image and allows genuine, complex grief.
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