Creating ongoing rituals and practices that honor the lost person, sustaining connection and meaning-making in daily life.
Mirabai maintained fierce devotion to Krishna despite separation and loss; her longing became the fuel for her spiritual practice. For children grieving someone who has died, a practice of devotion offers both continuity and comfort. This might take many forms: a memory jar, a letter-writing practice, a plant tended in someone's honor, artwork displayed, or stories shared regularly. Unlike the false positivity of "moving on," devotion acknowledges that the relationship endures in transformed ways. A child might light a candle and talk to the person each morning, or dedicate a sports achievement to their memory. These practices are not about denial; they're about integration. They affirm that the person mattered immensely and continues to shape the child's life. Mirabai shows us that longing, when channeled into meaning-making practices, becomes generative rather than static. Devotional rituals help children anchor their grief in action and love, transforming raw loss into purposeful remembrance.
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