Understanding grief as cyclical, not linear, with waves that return seasonally and developmentally, honoring the rhythm of sorrow and healing.
Devotional practice is cyclical—Mirabai sang the same songs across years, each repetition revealing new depth. Grief similarly moves in cycles: anniversaries, holidays, developmental milestones, and seasonal changes trigger renewed waves of sorrow. Young people often expect linear recovery ('I should be over this by now'), then feel shame when grief resurfaces. This concept teaches that grief returns in seasons: spring triggers anticipation of the person's birthday, winter holidays feel empty, the anniversary of death brings acute pain anew. Rather than pathology, these cycles are natural. Each return offers opportunity for deeper integration and processing as the child matures. A grief that felt overwhelming at age eight may be approached differently at thirteen. The practice invites young people to anticipate these seasonal returns and prepare with ritual, creativity, and community support. This normalizes grief's rhythm, reduces shame, and transforms predictable sorrows into sacred time. Over years, the cycles continue but their intensity may shift, honoring both the permanence of loss and the possibility of gradual integration and growth.
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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