Creating intentional communities where grieving children witness and support each other's mourning, echoing the sangha (spiritual community) tradition.
Mirabai existed within a larger tradition of bhakti practitioners—a sangha—where devotional expression was witnessed and held. Children grieving in isolation often feel uniquely burdened, believing their pain is strange or excessive. Grief circles create sangha for young mourners: spaces where they see other children articulating similar devastation, where shared sorrow becomes less isolating. These circles might include guided reflection, creative expression, or simply sitting together in honest presence. The power lies in witnessing and being witnessed. When a child shares their grief and sees recognition in another child's eyes—'I feel that too'—something shifts. They move from individual isolation into collective acknowledgment that loss is part of the human experience. These communities also normalize talking about death, memory, and love in ways that prevent the paralysis of silence.
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