Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Grief Circles as Bhakti Community

Creating intentional communities of shared mourning where children's grief becomes witnessed, validated, and held by others.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's bhakti was not solitary—it existed within spiritual communities of devotees who sang together, suffered together, and supported each other's radical love. For grieving children, isolation amplifies pain; community transforms it. Grief circles adapted from bhakti principles create containers where: children sit with peers who understand loss, express sorrow through song or shared ritual, receive witness from compassionate adults, and discover they're not alone in their pain. These circles differ from clinical support groups—they're rooted in spiritual practice and emotional resonance rather than symptom management. Children might share stories of their loved one, create art together, sing or drum, or sit in silence knowing others understand. The circle becomes sacred space where grief is not a problem to solve but a profound human experience to honor. Mirabai's communities sustained her through her own devastating losses. Similarly, peer grief circles sustained by adult facilitators help children recognize their mourning as both personal and collective—a human experience shared across time and culture. This restores meaning and belonging.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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