Understanding that when we mourn a public figure, we often grieve an archetypal role or value they embodied, not only the person.
Mirabai loved Krishna not only as a historical figure but as an archetypal embodiment of divine love—a symbol pointing beyond itself. When we collectively mourn, we're often grieving an archetype: the truth-teller, the healer, the freedom fighter, the creative genius. The person carried something larger. The examined heart can hold both: grieving the irreplaceable human being while also acknowledging that what they represented will live on through others who carry the same values or gifts. This is liberating because it prevents us from spiritually collapsing after one death. A beloved activist dies, but activism continues. A beloved artist passes, but creative beauty persists. Our grief honors their particular, irreplaceable contribution while recognizing that the archetype they embodied transcends any single person. This bhakti perspective allows us to mourn fully—to feel the specific loss—while also finding hope in the continuity of human goodness, creativity, and courage. Devotion becomes not attachment to one object but dedication to the values that object represented.
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