Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Integration Rather Than Recovery

Shifting the goal from helping children 'recover' or 'move on' to supporting integration—weaving loss into their identity and forward journey.

Mira
Why It Matters

The language of recovery implies a return to a previous state, which is impossible after loss. Mirabai didn't recover from her longing; she integrated it into a life of meaning and spiritual depth. For children, the more honest goal is integration: helping them weave what happened into who they're becoming. A child who has lost a parent is permanently changed—they cannot be recovered to their pre-loss self, nor should that be the aim. Instead, integration invites questions: How does this loss become part of your story? What values do you carry from this person? How do you want to honor them going forward? Integration is ongoing work, not a destination. It acknowledges that grief will resurface—at milestones, holidays, in moments of vulnerability—and that this is healthy, not failure. A child who integrates their loss develops resilience, meaning, and often a compassion that becomes central to who they are.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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