Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Breaking Free From Imposed Scripts

Rejecting cultural scripts about how children "should" grieve, honoring each child's unique mourning path as Mirabai rejected prescribed roles.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai famously rejected every role imposed on her—dutiful wife, obedient daughter, respectable widow. She chose her own path despite tremendous social pressure, refusing to perform expectations that violated her truth. Similarly, grieving children are often subjected to scripts about how they should respond to loss: they should cry but not too much, move on within a reasonable timeline, not talk about the deceased too often, be "strong" for their parents. These scripts are typically about adult comfort, not the child's actual needs. By learning from Mirabai's radical refusal of imposed identity, adults can help children identify and reject grief scripts that don't fit. Some children need to talk constantly; others need long silences. Some find meaning in rituals; others resist them. Some want to remember daily; others need periods of forgetting. Supporting a child's authentic grief path—even when it differs from cultural expectations or adult preferences—honors their individual relationship to loss. This concept teaches that the child's way of grieving is not wrong because it doesn't match a predetermined timeline or behavioral standard. Freedom means trusting the child's inner wisdom about their own mourning.

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Love & Relationships
Peri
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