Maintaining passionate engagement with what is lost, honoring ongoing relationship beyond death or ending, refusing premature resolution.
Western grief frameworks often aim toward "closure" and "moving on." Bhakti offers a radically different model: ongoing devotion. Mirabai's relationship with Krishna persisted in absence, intensified through longing, expressed continuously through verse and dance. She did not "get over" her beloved; she deepened her connection to him through creative practice. Applied to grief and creativity, this means: the person or dream you've lost need not be relegated to past tense. You can continue speaking to them, creating for them, being transformed by them. This isn't denial; it's a different way of relating. Your art becomes an ongoing conversation with absence. The loss doesn't become smaller or more distant—it becomes textured, alive, woven into your present creative practice. Devotion without closure means grief becomes generative rather than a problem to solve.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.