Krishna's flute in Mirabai's devotion is the symbol of how the breath of grief—the breath of longing—becomes music; loss is the air that makes the instrument sing.
In Mirabai's poetry, Krishna's flute is not decoration but essence: the god's love flows through an instrument, creating irresistible beauty. The flute itself is hollow—empty, penetrable, nothing without the breath that moves through it. Mirabai's grief made her hollow, receptive, a vessel for devotional song. This image illuminates the creative process in grief: you do not make meaning from nothing, but from the raw material of loss. Grief moves through you like breath, and if you do not resist it, it becomes music. The hollow flute does not try; it allows. For those making art from grief, this offers a practice: become the hollow place where loss can move. Surrender to the breath of sorrow rather than controlling it. What emerges is not your private pain but something that can sing to others, that becomes beauty precisely because it is true, alive, and undefended. Transmutation happens through receptivity.
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