Grief rituals as threshold experiences that transform understanding of what matters, what is real, and who the bereaved becomes in relation to mortality.
In bhakti tradition, encountering the divine requires transformation—the self must be remade, hardened assumptions must dissolve. Mirabai's life was initiation through devotion. Similarly, grief rituals across cultures accomplish deep initiation: they transform the bereaved person fundamentally. Those who have moved through genuine grief rituals often report shifted priorities, deepened compassion, changed relationships with time and meaning. Funeral rites in many traditions intentionally mark this threshold—the bereaved person enters as one person and emerges as another, now claimed by loss and mortality. The examined heart deepens its examination; it can no longer assume the same things about love, safety, or permanence. Hindu shraddha ceremonies, for example, span a year, marking the gradual initiation of the bereaved into a new relationship with the deceased and with life itself. Mirabai teaches that profound encounters—whether with the divine or with death—remake us. Grief rituals accomplish this initiatory work deliberately and with community support.
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