Using Mirabai's practice of devotional relationship to reframe how children maintain connection with those they have lost.
Mirabai maintained an intimate, ongoing relationship with Krishna through song, prayer, and daily practice—speaking to him, questioning him, loving him across the boundary of the invisible. This model offers children a framework for sustaining bonds with deceased loved ones. Rather than the grief-work language of "letting go" or "closure," devotion suggests active, living relationship. Children can maintain connection through naming, remembering, creating rituals, speaking aloud, and continuing to include the person in their inner life. Mirabai's tradition teaches that love transcends death; the departed remain present through our devotion to them. For young people, this means grief is not an ending but a transformation of relationship. Adults can support this by encouraging children to develop their own practices of remembrance—writing letters, creating art, visiting meaningful places—that honor the ongoing presence of those they have lost in their lives and hearts.
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