Creating sacred community spaces where grieving children gather for mutual witnessing, mirroring Mirabai's devotional collective gatherings.
Mirabai sang with other devotees, her grief and joy intertwined with collective spiritual practice. The sangha—community of practitioners—became essential to her survival and transformation. For children, isolation magnifies grief's weight. A grief sangha intentionally gathers young people in shared sorrow, creating containers where no one must perform normalcy. These aren't therapy groups focused on solving or progressing, but sacred spaces for witnessed presence. Children learn they're not uniquely broken, that others understand the strange coexistence of laughter and tears. Mirabai's example shows that communal devotion—whether through song, silence, ritual, or simple gathering—heals what solitary sorrow compounds. These spaces might be formal groups, school circles, or family rituals, but their essential function remains: transforming private pain into shared spiritual practice where children feel genuinely seen and held.
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