Mirabai's relationship with Krishna oscillated between union and separation; creative work emerges from holding both presence and absence simultaneously.
In bhakti poetry, the beloved appears and disappears—Krishna is both intimately present and eternally absent. This is not a contradiction to be resolved but a fundamental paradox of love and loss. When someone dies, they are both gone and vivid; when you end a chapter of your life, it is both finished and still shaping you. This dialectic is the actual texture of grief, and it is also the texture of creativity. The best work often emerges from holding contradictions: the dead are alive in memory; the lost time was both wasted and essential; the old self was both wrong and necessary. Rather than resolving these tensions, you can let them coexist in the work, creating depth and resonance. This concept teaches that your creative output need not be coherent or resolved; it can be paradoxical, holding irreconcilable truths.
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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