Mirabai's radical emotional honesty teaches that children need explicit permission to feel and express grief fully, without shame or suppression.
Mirabai sang her deepest sorrows to Krishna with unflinching vulnerability, treating her pain as worthy of sacred attention. For children navigating loss, this tradition offers liberation from the cultural pressure to "be strong" or "move on." Adults supporting grieving young people can adopt Mirabai's model: creating safe spaces where tears, anger, and despair are honored as genuine spiritual experiences, not problems to solve. This means validating that grief is love with nowhere to go, and that the intensity of a child's mourning reflects the depth of their attachment. When children see their guardians modeling emotional authenticity—naming their own sorrow without attempting to transcend it prematurely—they learn that heartbreak is survivable and that their feelings deserve witness. The examined heart, as Mirabai practiced it, becomes a sanctuary where children's grief can unfold at its own pace.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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