Bhakti's core is loving attention; applied to anniversaries, it becomes a practice of witnessing loss without fixing or transcending it.
Bhakti devotion is fundamentally about bearing witness—to the beloved's presence, to one's own longing, to the divine in all things. On a triggering date, bhakti-as-witness means turning full attention toward the grief itself, toward the person or experience being commemorated, toward the specific texture of this particular loss. It is not meditation aimed at transcendence or therapy aimed at resolution, but devoted attention. Mirabai stood before the divine without armor, without spiritual bypassing. Applied to grief anniversaries, this means: sit with the loss. Light a candle. Speak the name aloud. Read old letters. Look at photographs. Let the heart be fully present to what was and what is no longer. Bhakti witness practice transforms the anniversary from something to endure into something to inhabit. The practice teaches that our capacity to grieve is our capacity to love, and that presence—not progress—is the spiritual offering.
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