Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Grief Without Closure: Living With Absence

Rejecting the demand for resolution or meaning-making, learning to live with permanent absence as a altered baseline.

Mira
Why It Matters

Contemporary culture obsesses over closure—the narrative endpoint where grief resolves and life returns to normal. Mirabai's tradition knew otherwise. Her longing for Krishna was never satisfied, never concluded; it was the substance of her spiritual life. This concept reclaims grief without closure as a mature spiritual practice. When we lose someone—especially through public tragedy—we don't return to a prior state. We live henceforth in absence. This is not failure or pathology. It is the honest recognition that some losses permanently alter the landscape. The demand for closure often serves institutions more than mourners, allowing systems to declare incidents 'resolved' and move forward. Mirabai's open-ended longing offers another way: living with what cannot be fixed, honoring the permanent change without demanding it make sense. Collective grief that accepts this allows communities to hold both continued living and ongoing sorrow simultaneously. We don't close the wound; we integrate it. We don't find meaning; we accept meaninglessness alongside meaning-making. We live differently, marked and changed.

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