The creation of shared rituals, spaces, and practices where communities can mourn civilization's losses together, moving from isolation into communion.
Mirabai sang in community, drew others into her ecstatic devotion, created spaces where the marginalized and heartbroken could gather. Anticipatory grief flourishes in isolation and becomes toxic, but in community it becomes transformative. Creating rituals of collective grieving—whether gatherings to mourn species loss, ceremonies for land that will not be saved, or regular practices of acknowledging what we're losing—moves us from private despair into communion. These are not morbid but deeply nourishing. They acknowledge that we grieve together, that this loss is shared, that we do not carry it alone. Mirabai's devotional gatherings became spaces of liberation. Collective grieving practices become spaces where the examined heart can rest in community, where love for civilization can be named and held, where we can support each other in the necessary work of loving what we are losing. This transforms grief from paralysis into solidarity.
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