A practice of honest introspection during grief that asks what loss reveals about our values, attachments, and capacity for compassion.
Mirabai's devotional life centered on examining her own heart—its longings, contradictions, and truths. She refused comfortable certainties, instead wrestling openly with love and abandonment. This model applies directly to collective grief: mourning a public figure or tragedy invites us to examine why we grieve, what we've lost in that person or moment, and what their absence illuminates about our deepest values. The examined heart in grief asks hard questions: Do we grieve their work or their image? What does our mourning reveal about our own fears? How does this loss change what we commit to? Rather than moving quickly past grief into solutions or narratives, Mirabai's tradition insists on lingering in the honest discomfort of the heart. This creates space for deeper collective understanding—we grieve not just the person lost but ourselves in relation to that loss, discovering unexpected truths about what we truly cherish and what we've left undone.
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