Concrete practices where children channel their love into service, ritual, and remembrance that honors the deceased while building resilience.
Mirabai expressed her devotion through singing, dancing, poetry, and radical life choices—her love moved outward into the world. For grieving children, this principle translates into meaningful practices: creating a memory box, establishing a ritual birthday acknowledgment, volunteering in a cause the deceased cared about, or creating art in their honor. These practices transform abstract grief into embodied action, giving the child agency and purpose. Service and remembrance practices also provide structure—they organize the child's love into specific, recurring actions that feel manageable. Importantly, these are not distractions from grief but expressions of it. A child who plants flowers annually in their father's memory, or who participates in a cancer walk in their mother's name, is engaging in contemporary devotional practice. Such practices build resilience by connecting loss to meaning, transforming passive suffering into active love expressed through the world.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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