The understanding that those we love deeply—and then lose—reflect back to us truths about ourselves and open doorways to deeper self-knowledge and spiritual growth.
In Mirabai's devotion, Krishna was not separate from her inner self but a mirror reflecting her own deepest nature and a gateway to transcendence. When we lose someone we love, we are forced to reckon with what they meant to us, what they revealed about our capacity for love, and how their presence changed us. This concept suggests that grief, properly met, becomes a form of spiritual practice. The beloved—whether human, divine, or a part of ourselves we've lost—becomes a teacher even or especially in absence. For creative work, this frame suggests exploring in your art: Who was this person to me? What did they reflect back? How did they open me? By engaging these questions with honesty, loss becomes initiation. The relationship doesn't end; it transforms into a new form of knowing and being.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.