The reframing of grief rituals as practices that reveal what we love most and what binds us, making attachment itself a subject for examined consciousness.
Mirabai's longing for Krishna was not viewed as weakness or spiritual failure; it was her path, her teacher, her salvation. This radical reframing—that desire and attachment illuminate consciousness rather than obstruct it—offers a different model for understanding what grief rituals accomplish. Many Buddhist and Hindu traditions teach that grief reveals the attachments that create suffering, but Mirabai's bhakti suggests that the revelation itself is valuable. Grief rituals accomplish important work when they create space to examine attachment without shame. What did we love in this person? What needs did they meet? What patterns of attachment do their absence reveal? Rather than transcending these questions, Mirabai's model suggests living fully into them. Islamic thinkers speak of grief as a love made visible; Jewish traditions honor the specificity of loss. Rituals accomplish this examination through structure that allows sustained attention to particular attachments. The examined heart does not flee its loves but knows them completely, which paradoxically leads toward both deeper attachment and greater freedom—a mystery that only direct experience, ritualized and witnessed, can teach.
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