A contemplative practice adapted from Mirabai's ecstatic devotion, where children intentionally witness moments of joy, connection, and beauty even while grieving.
Mirabai's devotional path involved ecstatic states—moments of transcendent connection and overwhelming feeling that she celebrated rather than suppressed. This practice translates into grief support as 'ecstatic witnessing': children deliberately notice and honor moments of unexpected joy, beauty, or connection that arise even during sorrow. A child might witness sunlight through trees and consciously receive it; notice their own laugh and allow it fully; feel their loved one's presence in a moment of grace. This is not replacing grief with happiness but recognizing that loss and beauty coexist. Mirabai danced in her grief; she didn't wait for sorrow to pass before living fully. Young people practicing ecstatic witnessing learn to hold contradictions: they can miss someone deeply and feel genuine joy. They can be sad and experience beauty. This practice prevents the emotional flattening that sometimes accompanies unprocessed grief and reconnects children to the fullness of life their loved one would want them to experience.
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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