Developing children's tolerance for contradictory emotions and truths—sadness and joy, anger and love, moving forward and honoring the past.
Mirabai's poetry vibrates with paradox: longing and fulfillment, separation and union, devotion and freedom. Her examined heart could hold seemingly opposite truths simultaneously. Grieving children initially experience their emotions as mutually exclusive: if I laugh, does that betray my grief? If I'm having fun, does that mean I didn't really love them? If I'm getting better, should I feel guilty? This concept teaches that the heart is large enough for paradox. A child can miss someone terribly and also be relieved they're no longer suffering. They can feel grateful for time spent together and furious they don't have more. They can honor their past connection and build a new identity. They can move forward in their life while keeping the deceased person present in their heart. By normalizing paradox, we prevent false choices and fracturing. We teach children that emotional maturity means complexity, not simplification. This is particularly important for young people whose cognitive development is reaching the capacity for abstract thinking; supporting their ability to hold multiple truths simultaneously is developmentally appropriate and spiritually sophisticated.
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