Mirabai's practice of witnessing the divine presence teaches a form of grief companionship that neither abandons suffering nor attempts to resolve it prematurely.
In bhakti practice, the devotee learns to witness the divine presence—not to change it or make it better, but to be fully present to it. This is a revolutionary stance for grief work, because our culture's default response to depression is to fix it: take medication, go to therapy, move on, think positive. While these have their place, they often skip over something essential: the need to simply be present to grief without agenda. Mirabai teaches that presence itself is transformative. When we witness our sorrow with the same devotion she offered to Krishna—with tenderness, without judgment, as a sacred encounter—something shifts. Depression thrives partly because it is met with resistance; we fight it, shame it, or deny it. Devotional witness offers an alternative: we turn toward it, acknowledge it, let it teach us. This is not passivity but active, loving attention. By refusing to pathologize the presence of grief, we paradoxically help it move and transform, because blocked emotion cannot flow.
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