Mirabai's unwavering devotion to Krishna despite social rejection demonstrates how young people can ground themselves in meaningful practices when loss destabilizes their world.
Mirabai maintained fierce devotion even when her family rejected her, when society condemned her, when her beloved remained unreachable. This steadfastness offers profound wisdom for grieving children: commitment to something greater than pain can become an anchor. For young people, devotion might mean daily rituals honoring the deceased, creative expression, spiritual practice, or dedication to values the lost person embodied. Mirabai's example shows that devotion isn't denial—she never minimized her longing. Rather, devotion provides a container, a practice that holds grief while keeping the griever tethered to meaning. When children establish practices of devotion—whether through prayer, art, nature, or service—they access Mirabai's wisdom: that grief and devotion can coexist, that commitment survives loss, and that showing up daily to what we love is itself a form of healing.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.