Mirabai's devotion to Krishna revealed who she was becoming; grief anniversaries illuminate how the deceased shaped your development and continues to guide it.
Throughout Mirabai's life, her relationship with Krishna wasn't static—it evolved and deepened. Krishna became progressively more internal, more subtle, more identified with her own divine nature. Her devotion wasn't about clinging to a fixed image; it was about continuous transformation. This offers profound wisdom for anniversary grief. The person who has died shaped who you are becoming. On triggering dates, you might ask: how did they influence my becoming? What qualities did they see in me that I'm still developing? What conversations remain unfinished? What dreams did we share that I'm now carrying forward? Rather than grief fixed on the past, this becomes grief in service of your continued unfolding. The beloved becomes a mirror showing you who you're becoming without them. This year, you're different than last year's anniversary—perhaps wiser, perhaps more fractured, perhaps more compassionate. On the triggering date, reflect on the journey between anniversaries. How has their absence changed you? What are you learning? Mirabai understood devotion as a spiral, not a circle—returning to the beloved's memory each year, but standing in a new place, having become someone new through the year's living.
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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