The examined heart—Mirabai's insistence on looking directly at emotional truth—becomes a contemplative practice that helps children process grief without dissociation or avoidance.
Mirabai's devotion required relentless self-awareness: she examined her own contradictions, her longing, her defiance of social expectation. This practice of examination—turning awareness inward without judgment—offers grieving children a structured way to stay present with difficult feelings. Rather than distracting or numbing, examination as sacred practice invites young people to notice: where does this sadness live in my body? What does my grief need right now? What did this person mean to me? This contemplative approach, rooted in Mirabai's tradition of honest introspection, helps children develop emotional literacy and prevents the delayed complications that arise from suppressed grief. The practice acknowledges that understanding our own hearts is both difficult and holy work.
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