Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Heart's Archaeology of Loss

Mirabai's practice of excavating and honoring personal losses as preparation for witnessing and metabolizing collective losses.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's poetry is archaeology of loss: she names her dead husband, her rejected family, her impossible love, the contradictions she could not resolve. Rather than moving past these losses, she dug into them repeatedly, allowing each layer to reveal new depths of understanding and devotion. Her personal griefs became the language for spiritual truth. In anticipatory grief for civilization, this practice is vital preparation. Before we can authentically grieve what civilization may lose, we must tend to our own losses: the lives we thought we'd live, the futures we imagined, the stability we took for granted, the world as it was. This heart archaeology—the careful excavation of what we have lost and are losing—is not self-indulgent but essential work. It teaches us the grammar of grief, its textures and languages. It softens us. When civilizational losses come, we will have already begun the work of metabolizing loss in our own hearts. Mirabai's example suggests that personal grief tended with honesty and depth becomes the forge in which we can meet collective grief with wisdom and compassion rather than shock and fragmentation.

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