Bhakti (devotional practice) offers a pathway to transform personal grief into something sacred, meaningful, and generative—not by escape but by direction.
Bhakti is devotional surrender, and for Mirabai it was not an escape from grief but a container for it. Rather than deny or suppress her pain, she poured it into devotion. This is alchemy in the truest sense: not eliminating the base metal of sorrow but transfiguring it into something that serves spirit and art. In the context of making from loss, bhakti suggests that your grief need not be resolved or overcome. Instead, it can be consecrated. You can pour your mourning into a practice, a relationship, a creative work that honors what was lost and what it meant. This does not make the grief go away; it makes it matter. Mirabai's devotion to Krishna transformed her personal loss into a resource for others—her kirtans became medicine. Your grief, similarly, can feed something larger than yourself.
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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