Building spaces where children's grief is witnessed and honored by others, creating community containers rooted in Mirabai's model of collective devotion.
While Mirabai's devotion was intensely personal, bhakti traditions emphasize sacred community—people gathering to sing, pray, and experience the divine together. For grieving children, communities of witness are healing: grief circles, memorial gatherings, peer support groups, or even families who create rituals together. In these spaces, children experience the profound relief of being seen in their sorrow without having to explain, justify, or 'fix' it. Sacred witness means others show up with their own hearts open, validating that this loss matters. Children learn they are not alone and that their loved one's impact rippled through multiple lives. These communities also model how love persists beyond individual loss—how a person continues to shape and connect those who remain. By gathering intentionally around grief, we teach children that mourning is not shameful solitude but sacred communion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.