The practice of bearing witness through poetry, song, and voice—making grief visible and communal rather than silent or individual.
Mirabai sang her love and grief publicly, refusing silence or shame. Her bhakti was performative—a declaration, a lament, a rebellion. For those carrying anticipatory grief about civilization, this offers a crucial permission: to voice what is breaking, to make sorrow communal and creative rather than private and inert. Witness through language—poetry, song, testimony, ritual—transforms individual despair into shared reckoning. When we sing our grief, we acknowledge its realness and invite others into honest feeling. This is not catharsis that resolves the crisis, but rather a practice of refusing to let the dying be forgotten or unmourned. Bhakti witness insists that how we speak about loss matters, that our expressions shape collective consciousness, and that voice itself is a form of devotion to what is passing.
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