Mirabai's devotion to Krishna as both external deity and internal reality reveals how the person we grieve becomes a mirror for understanding ourselves more completely.
In bhakti, the beloved—whether Krishna or a human love—functions as both object of devotion and mirror of one's deepest self. Mirabai saw Krishna everywhere because she had internalized his qualities as her own aspiration. When we grieve someone, we often ask: "Who am I without them?" This concept reframes that crisis. The person you've lost was a mirror reflecting back your capacity for love, your vulnerabilities, your values. Their absence doesn't erase that reflection—it deepens it. Through examining your grief, you meet yourself more fully. What qualities did this person draw out of you? What limitations did they challenge? Living with loss long-term means integrating the beloved's presence not as an external figure to recover but as an internalized wisdom about who you have become through loving them. This framework transforms the relationship from possession to integration, from mourning absence to honoring the ways they live within your altered self.
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