Mirabai's relationship to the divine beloved mirrors how grief rituals across cultures maintain the dead as active, present participants in ongoing life.
For Mirabai, Krishna was not memory but presence—she conversed with him, danced for him, felt his responsive attention. This living relationship to an unseen beloved parallels how grief rituals accomplish a different ontology of death. In many cultures, the dead remain active members of the community. Mexican ofrendas set places for the deceased to visit. Korean jesa rituals feed and honor the ancestors. Hindu shraddha practices sustain the deceased's spiritual development. These rituals reject the Western binary of alive/dead, replacing it with a continuum of presence. The dead are invited, addressed, fed, consulted. They influence the living; the living sustain them through ritual attention. Mirabai's devotional framework illuminates this: the beloved is absent and present simultaneously, transcendent and intimate. Grief rituals accomplish what Mirabai knew—they hold paradox. Death changes form but not relationship. Through ritual, the living maintain conversation with the dead, receiving guidance and blessing across the permeable boundary between worlds.
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