A practice of presence with collective sorrow that resists the urge to resolve, explain, or transcend it too quickly.
Mirabai's poetry does not resolve—it dwells in contradiction, longing, pain, and ecstasy simultaneously. She did not move through grief toward a final enlightenment but inhabited it as a permanent condition of the spiritual path. In collective mourning, there is often pressure to 'move on,' to extract meaning, to transcend the loss. But Mirabai teaches that wisdom sometimes means staying with the wound. When we grieve collectively and resist the impulse to fix or quickly integrate the loss, we honor both the deceased and the reality of impermanence. Collective rituals—memorials, vigils, anniversaries—function as sacred containers that hold grief without demanding it be resolved. This is witnessing: being present to suffering without trying to solve it or make it make sense. In a culture obsessed with closure and moving forward, the practice of witnessed, unhurried grief becomes revolutionary. We allow collective sorrow to live in us, reshaping us, teaching us, humbling us.
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