A practice of bearing witness to one's own and others' grief through devotional attention rather than trying to fix, console, or transcend the immediate pain.
Mirabai's practice was one of devotional witness—speaking her suffering directly to Krishna, holding nothing back, not expecting immediate resolution but trusting the Divine to meet her in the utterance itself. This translates to a practice for the bereaved and those around them: the presence of witness without the burden of solution. In the immediate aftermath of death, the human impulse is to console, explain, redirect toward acceptance or meaning. But Mirabai's model shows a different path: to be present to grief as a sacred act, to listen without trying to move the mourner through stages, to acknowledge that some moments are purely about the fact of loss, not its meaning. For the bereaved, this means giving oneself permission to grieve without needing to understand, to speak the loss aloud, to be heard without being required to move on. For those around the bereaved, it means learning to sit with another's raw pain without rushing to fix it.
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