The act of expressing grief through song, movement, or testimony as a sacred practice that transforms private sorrow into communal witness.
Mirabai sang her devotion in the temple and streets—her grief for Krishna's absence became poetry, movement, and public declaration. She didn't contain her sorrow; she made it visible as an act of love and liberation. In collective mourning, devotion-as-grief means we don't keep our sorrow private or shameful. Instead, we express it through whatever channels feel true: songs, memorials, testimony, art, gathering. This Sophos teaches that collective grief needs visibility to be held and transformed. When we publicly grieve a public figure or shared tragedy, we're not being self-indulgent; we're participating in a sacred act of witness and connection. The grief itself becomes devotion—a way of saying 'this life mattered, this loss is real, we are changed by it.' By making grief visible and communal, we dissolve the isolation of private sorrow and participate in genuine freedom.
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