The systematic devotional practice of bhakti offers a framework for sustained ecological commitment beyond guilt, shame, or burnout.
Bhakti is a complete spiritual path: not momentary emotion but disciplined practice of love and surrender. It includes kirtan (singing), meditation, service, and ethical living, sustained over lifetimes. Climate activism often burns out because it relies on willpower, guilt, or anger—finite fuels. The bhakti framework offers something deeper: a way of living in love-relationship with the Earth that sustains itself through practice, community, and meaning rather than moral obligation. Mirabai's devotion was not a burden she shouldered but a joy she danced. Her commitment lasted her lifetime not because she was obligated but because she had found her truest life within it. An ecological bhakti path similarly invites us to make devotion to Earth's healing our central spiritual practice—through daily rituals, community gathering, service work, and creative expression. This transforms environmental work from duty into love, from activism into devotion, creating the resilience needed for the long transformation ahead.
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