Establishing that grief is witnessed and held by community, preventing children's isolation and normalizing collective acknowledgment of loss.
Mirabai's devotional tradition thrived in community—others gathered around her, sung with her, testified to her truth. Children who grieve in isolation develop shame and confusion; those witnessed by community integrate loss more healthily. This concept emphasizes gathering: family rituals, school acknowledgment, community ceremonies, peer support groups where children can see others grieving. The child needs to know their loss is real and mattering to others, not something to hide or overcome alone. When a school marks a student's loss with acknowledgment, when a friend's parent shows up at the funeral, when grief circles exist where children can see peers experiencing similar losses, the child learns grief is universal and survivable. Mirabai thrived in devotional community that validated her experience; contemporary children need equivalent community mirrors. Schools, religious communities, mental health practitioners, and families all have roles in creating this witness. The message: "Your loss matters. Your grief is real. You are not alone in this, and we will remember with you."
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