Mirabai's daily bhakti practice shows how grief rituals accomplish their deepest work not as one-time events but as sustained, cyclical disciplines that integrate loss into ongoing life.
Mirabai's devotion was not a single cathartic moment but a lifelong practice—songs, dances, meditations, prayers woven into each day's fabric. This challenges the modern assumption that grief rituals are discrete events (funerals, memorials) meant to resolve loss. Instead, Mirabai models grief as a sustaining practice: the daily return to longing, the repeated invocation of the beloved, the ritualized cultivation of connection across separation. Many cultures understand this—Día de Muertos annually, ancestor veneration as rhythm, the Jewish calendar's mourning seasons. Grief rituals accomplish their work through repetition and return, not closure. Mirabai's examined heart teaches that sustained devotional practice keeps the relationship alive, prevents the beloved from being locked away in memory, and allows the griever to grow into new understanding of loss each time the ritual repeats, transforming stagnant grief into living relationship.
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