Mirabai models that grief and ecstasy, sorrow and joy, are not opposites but can coexist in expanded emotional consciousness.
Mirabai's devotion is fierce, painful, and joyful all at once—her poetry holds contradictions without resolve. Prolonged grief often becomes complicated when the griever forbids themselves from joy, laughter, or happiness after loss, fearing it betrays the deceased. This framework teaches that expanded emotional consciousness can hold grief and moments of joy without one negating the other. Remembering a funny moment and laughing, experiencing beauty despite sadness, or finding delight in small things are not moral failures but signs of integration. The practice involves consciously allowing emotions to layer and coexist: 'I am devastated AND I can appreciate this moment.' Meditation, creative expression, or ritual that explicitly honors both grief and joy—perhaps celebrating the deceased's birth as well as mourning their death—helps the griever move beyond the flatness that complicated grief can impose, recovering the capacity for full-spectrum feeling that honors both the loss and the continuity of life.
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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