Using devotional practice—singing, ritual, sacred connection—as a grounding practice that helps children maintain continuity and meaning after loss.
Mirabai's unwavering devotion to Krishna sustained her through exile, rejection, and profound loneliness. Her example shows how devotional anchors—whether to a person's memory, a practice, or a sacred principle—can stabilize children through grief's disorientation. For young people, devotion might manifest as creating rituals honoring the deceased, singing songs that hold memories, or maintaining daily practices that feel sacred. These anchors provide rhythm when everything feels chaotic, offering something reliable to return to. Mirabai's bhakti tradition teaches that love doesn't require the beloved's physical presence—it persists and transforms. For grieving children, this reframes loss not as love's end but as love taking a different form. Devotional practices become containers for continuing bonds, allowing young people to maintain relationship with what they've lost.
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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