A bhakti framework for understanding and ethically navigating our emotional attachments to public figures we've never met.
Mirabai's examined heart extended to her attachments themselves. She continuously questioned her relationship to Krishna, ensuring devotion served awakening rather than ego. This applies directly to contemporary dynamics around public figures: celebrities, leaders, artists whom we feel connected to despite never meeting them. Collective grief reveals these attachments are real and often powerful, yet they require examination. Do we project our own unmet needs onto public figures? Do we use admiration as escape from inner work? Are we honoring their actual humanity or a constructed ideal? Bhakti tradition doesn't deny these attachments but invites honest inquiry into their nature and function. When public figures die, examined attachment allows grief without disillusionment. We can honor what they genuinely offered while releasing fantasy projections. This mature approach to collective mourning prevents the cycles of idealization and devastation that characterize celebrity culture, instead cultivating relationships to public figures grounded in reality and mutual growth.
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