Structured, sacred practices—ritual, song, art, prayer—that help children honor and actively remember the person who died.
Mirabai's bhakti practice was not passive feeling but active devotion: singing, dancing, writing, creating in service to her beloved. For grieving children, devotional remembrance offers concrete practices that transform abstract loss into living relationship. This might include creating an altar, singing a song each year, writing letters, creating art, or establishing rituals that mark important dates. These practices serve multiple functions: they provide structure during chaos, create safe containers for emotion, honor the deceased's continued presence in the child's life, and allow expression that words alone cannot hold. Regular devotional remembrance also prevents the dangerous myth that moving forward means forgetting. Instead, young people learn that honoring the dead is compatible with living fully and building new chapters.
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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