Transforming the intensity of anticipatory grief into a form of spiritual intensity similar to bhakti devotion.
Mirabai's bhakti was ecstatic—crying, dancing, singing her longing and devotion. She did not suppress emotion but channeled it toward transcendence. In anticipatory grief for civilization, we face enormous feelings: dread, sorrow, rage, helplessness. Rather than pathologize these as depression or paralyze into activism, we can alchemize them into a practice of presence and intensity. Like Mirabai's ecstatic devotion, grief becomes a legitimate form of depth engagement with reality. It heightens perception, dissolves trivial concerns, and creates community with others who feel. Grief-as-practice means letting sorrow move through the body, voice, and consciousness—not to wallow but to touch something true and vital. The intensity becomes clarifying, even, in strange moments, alive.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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