Applying the devotional practice of bhakti (loving service) as active grief work, where children channel sorrow into meaningful acts of remembrance.
In bhakti tradition, devotion is expressed through service, music, art, and daily practice. For grieving children, bhakti becomes a container for grief work—not passive suffering but active loving engagement. A child might plant a garden in someone's memory, create a song of remembrance, cook their grandmother's recipe, or write letters to the person they've lost. Each act is bhakti: loving service to the relationship. This framework transforms grief into something generative rather than purely painful. The child experiences their love continuing through creative action, their hands staying busy in devotion. Bhakti practices also provide healthy repetition—daily rituals that anchor grief in the body and community, whether lighting a candle each morning or visiting a meaningful place, creating rhythm and structure during overwhelming loss.
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