Reframing anticipatory mourning as a clarifying, maturing practice rather than a mental health problem to be resolved.
Mirabai's poetry is saturated with separation pain—longing for Krishna, separation from the beloved. Yet this grief was not her illness; it was her training ground. Her sorrow refined her perception and deepened her devotion. In Western psychology, anticipatory grief is often pathologized as anxiety to be managed. Mirabai's tradition invites a different understanding: grief is preparation. It loosens attachment to illusions, reveals what truly matters, and matures the soul. When you grieve a civilization's trajectory, you are not failing; you are waking. This grief can become tender, clarifying, even generative—a force that makes you more honest, more kind, more aligned with what you actually believe. The practice is not to cure the grief but to let it work on you.
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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