A practice of celebrating, beautifying, and ritually honoring aspects of civilization while we still have them, as an act of love and remembrance.
Shringar in bhakti means ornamentation and adornment—Mirabai dressed Krishna with devotion, adorned him with her attention and love. This was not superficial but a deep honoring of the beloved. For civilizations facing anticipatory grief, shringar suggests a collective practice: to adorn and celebrate what we are losing while we still have it. This might mean intentional ceremonies for old growth forests, documenting and sharing traditional knowledge, creating beauty in spaces of loss, or gathering communities to collectively acknowledge what will not survive. This is neither denial nor morbid dwelling, but a conscious practice of devotion. By adorning what we love, we create sacred records. We say: this mattered, this was beautiful, we witnessed it. We transform loss into legacy. Shringar becomes a way of loving civilization fiercely and consciously before change overtakes us, preventing grief from becoming only regret.
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