Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Bhakti as Ecological Witness

Devotional love extending to the living world itself, transforming ecological anticipatory grief into sacred relationship and responsibility.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's bhakti was not limited to Krishna but extended to all life—animals, plants, rivers, forests. Her examined heart recognized the divine in creation itself. This ecological dimension of bhakti directly addresses the environmental core of civilizational anticipatory grief. When we practice bhakti toward the Earth, we move beyond guilt or despair about ecological loss into a stance of sacred relationship. We grieve species extinction, climate chaos, and ecosystem collapse not as abstract problems but as losses of beloved beings. This transforms grief into ecological practice: protecting forests becomes an act of love, restoring soil becomes devotion, reducing consumption becomes spiritual discipline. Bhakti as ecological witness allows us to hold both grief and celebration simultaneously—mourning what is lost while cherishing what remains and can still flourish. This practice grounds anticipatory grief in the body and in the land, making it both more bearable and more actionable.

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