Mirabai's bhakti approach treats grief as an intimate relationship to be deepened, not a problem to be solved, making loss itself a form of spiritual practice.
In bhakti tradition, devotion is not obedience but intimate relationship—a continuous dialogue with the divine, marked by longing, complaint, surrender, and love. Mirabai extends this into a model for relating to grief: instead of treating loss as a wound to be healed and moved past, she treats it as a living relationship that evolves. This means grief becomes a practice—something we show up for, speak to, sing about, and allow to change us. The devotional approach refuses the timeline of "closure" and instead asks: How do I stay in relationship with what I've lost? What does my grief ask of me today? This transforms grief from a static state into a dynamic practice. For creators, this means loss becomes a teacher, a muse, a presence that continues to shape and inform work. The creative output becomes an ongoing conversation with absence, loss becomes luminous, and grief becomes a form of devotion to what we loved.
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