Extending love and witness to public figures and communities unlike ourselves, building empathy through collective mourning across social boundaries.
Mirabai crossed caste and gender boundaries with her devotion—she belonged to no single community but moved freely through spiritual landscapes, loved openly, and refused social restriction. When we grieve public figures from different backgrounds, cultures, or belief systems, we practice devotion across difference. Collective grief becomes a bridge-building practice: mourning a musician from another continent, honoring a political leader we disagreed with, witnessing the humanity of someone whose life differed radically from ours. This practice dissolves the illusion that grief belongs only to those most similar to the deceased. Mirabai's example teaches that love expands us beyond our familiar circles. Collective mourning becomes an opportunity to practice the radical empathy that our polarized world desperately needs—to sit in vigil with strangers, to recognize shared vulnerability, to discover common humanity through shared heartbreak.
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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