Treating intense grief as legitimate spiritual practice rather than pathology, learning wisdom through heartbreak like Mirabai's longing for divine union.
Mirabai's bhakti overflowed with anguish—longing for absent beloved, rejection by family, ecstatic pain—yet this suffering became her deepest teaching. Rather than pathologizing collective grief as depression or dysfunction, bhakti recognizes heartbreak as legitimate spiritual experience. When public figures die or tragedies devastate communities, the acute pain opens doors to authentic insight: about impermanence, interdependence, and what truly matters. This framework invites us to stop rushing grief toward closure. Instead, we can sit with anguish as teacher, asking what it reveals about our capacity for love, our vulnerability, our resistance to mortality. Collective grief becomes initiation into deeper humanity. The devastation following tragedy can awaken compassion that platitudes and quick recovery cannot touch. By honoring grief as legitimate rather than obstacle, we allow communities to transform suffering into wisdom, making loss meaningful rather than merely tragic.
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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