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Concept
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Devotion as Relationship With Loss

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.

Mira
Why It Matters

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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