Building capacity to articulate and distinguish different types of anticipatory grief, moving beyond vague dread toward specific, honest naming.
Mirabai's devotional tradition had sophisticated language for states of longing, separation, and love. She could distinguish nuances of grief that English often flattens into a single word. Grief literacy for civilization means developing similar precision: distinguishing between grief for what's already lost, what's actively disappearing, what might be lost, and what we fear we've never adequately valued. We grieve differently for forests than for institutions, for knowledge systems than for ecosystems. By building a more textured vocabulary of loss, we move beyond generalized anticipatory anxiety into specific, honest naming. This clarity is liberating—it prevents us from drowning in undifferentiated dread and allows us to respond with appropriate action and care to each specific loss. Language itself becomes a devotional practice.
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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