Mirabai's devotion required total presence; her example shows how moving through grief over lost health paradoxically increases capacity for presence in the present moment.
Mirabai's devotion demanded that she show up fully, moment by moment, in relationship with the divine. She could not afford distraction. Similarly, chronic illness has a way of forcing presence. When pain, fatigue, or limitation are real, dissociation and denial become impossible. This harsh teacher—chronic illness—paradoxically invites a quality of presence that many spiritual seekers work lifetimes to achieve. As you grieve what has been lost, you may find yourself increasingly awake to what remains: the quality of light, the kindness of a friend, the simple fact of breathing. Mirabai teaches that presence is cultivated through devotion, through attention, through showing up fully to what is. By meeting your grief directly, without numbing or escaping, you train yourself in presence. This does not redeem suffering or make it good, but it reveals that within loss lives an unexpected gift: the capacity to meet each moment, as it comes, with full awareness. This presence becomes its own form of freedom and grace.
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