Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Garden of Absence

Create a practice of tending to empty spaces and what is no longer there, treating absence itself as a presence.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai lived in the paradox of presence-in-absence, feeling Krishna most acutely when he was gone. Grief anniversaries often highlight what is absent: the phone call that won't come, the chair that sits empty, the birthday that passes uncelebrated. Rather than resist this void, bhakti invites you to tend it. Visit the empty spaces—a room, a bench, a place they loved. Sit with the absence rather than flee it. You might place flowers there, speak aloud, or simply witness the negative space. This practice acknowledges that absence itself is a form of presence; what is gone shapes us as much as what remains. By consciously tending to these empty places on triggering dates, you transform void into sacred ground, longing into prayer.

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