The capacity to grieve someone fully while acknowledging their flaws—loving the whole person, not an idealized myth.
Public mourning often creates a bifurcation: either we canonize the deceased into perfection, or we focus exclusively on their failures as a way to minimize our grief. Mirabai's love for Krishna was fierce, specific, and unsentimental. She loved not an abstract ideal but a complex divine being with many forms and contradictions. She held longing and frustration, devotion and anger, within the same heart. Holding Both Love and Imperfection is the mature practice of grieving a public figure as a real human: someone whose work we admired, who also made mistakes, who changed us in ways both constructive and harmful. This practice allows us to honor the genuine good someone did while refusing to pretend they were flawless. It allows us to feel real loss without performing false sanctity. When a beloved public figure dies, we can say: I loved what you offered the world. I also know you were human, limited, contradictory. Both are true. Both deserve space in my grief. This nuanced love is harder but more real, and ultimately more healing.
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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