Using song, prayer, poetry, and ritual to voice grief as an act of devotion, honoring both the beloved and one's own transformed spiritual state.
Mirabai's legacy is inseparable from her songs—over 4,000 verses expressing desire, longing, grief, and ecstatic devotion. She understood that grief, like love, demands expression, and that this expression strengthens rather than indulges it. Devotional expression creates a container for grief that honors its significance while transforming it into something shared and sacred. This might take many forms: singing a beloved's favorite song, writing letters or poetry, creating rituals that incorporate their memory, or praying in anger when that's what's true. The key is that these expressions are not primarily about catharsis or "processing" (modern psychological terms) but about actively maintaining relationship and devotion. When someone dies, we lose the daily opportunities to express our love through presence and action. Devotional expression channels that blocked love into tangible form. It witnesses: this person mattered, this loss changes me, this grief is worthy of my deepest creativity and attention. For those navigating complex grief, especially disenfranchised grief (socially unacknowledged losses), devotional expression validates the significance of the relationship and the legitimacy of continued mourning.
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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