Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Devotion as Present-Moment Anchor

Bhakti practice as technique for grounding awareness in the immediate moment, preventing anticipatory grief from collapsing into despair.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's devotion was radically present: she sang, danced, and loved in immediate, sensory engagement with the divine. This presence was her antidote to the future-oriented anxiety of separation. For anticipatory grief, presence becomes essential structure: the moment before us contains beauty, connection, and meaning that no future projection can diminish. When we practice devotion to what is present—a conversation, a plant, a meal, a sky—we build resilience against the flattening effect of catastrophic thinking. Mirabai teaches that the examined heart can simultaneously grieve civilization's trajectory and taste the sweetness of today's particular light. This is not denial but integration: we hold both the knowledge of systems' fragility and the direct experience of life's continuation. Grief practiced in presence becomes sustainable; projected into imagined futures, it calcifies into despair. Daily devotional practice—however one enacts it—trains the nervous system to return to the only moment where we actually live and can act.

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