A practice of bearing witness to collective suffering as a sacred act, drawing on Mirabai's willingness to see and name pain without looking away.
Mirabai did not turn from suffering—her own or others'. She witnessed injustice, exclusion, and heartbreak directly and named them in her songs. Devotional witness means showing up fully to tragedy without the numbing that distance provides. In an age of information overload, collective grief often becomes abstract or viral. Mirabai's model offers something different: a committed, conscious presence with suffering that treats it as sacred encounter rather than news cycle. Devotional witnessing means truly seeing the person who died—their actual life, relationships, contributions—not abstractions. It means sustaining attention when attention naturally fades. This practice transforms collective mourning from passive consumption of tragedy into active participation in honoring lives and acknowledging the reality of loss. Witness becomes a form of love.
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.