The framework that treats shared mourning as a spiritual practice of devotion, where grief becomes a form of communion with others and the sacred.
Bhakti, the devotional tradition Mirabai embodied, is fundamentally about relationship—the beloved and the lover in constant communion. Collective grief can be understood as collective bhakti: a devotional practice where mourning becomes our prayer, our song, our shared communion. When we gather to mourn a public figure or tragedy, we're not merely processing loss—we're engaged in a sacred act. We're saying together: this life mattered, this death changes us, we are connected through this ache. This Sophos teaches that collective mourning rituals, gatherings, vigils, and testimonies are not secondary to individual grief; they are primary spiritual practices. In coming together to grieve, we participate in something larger than ourselves. The examined heart recognizes that in collective bhakti, we're not separate individuals happening to feel the same sadness—we're parts of a single body experiencing its own transformation. This understanding transforms collective grief from something we endure into something we practice as devotion.
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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