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Khyal: Poetic Language for Unspeakable Loss

The use of metaphor and poetic indirection—as in Mirabai's lyrics—to express collective grief that defies literal language.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's devotional poems rarely describe loss directly; instead, she used metaphor—the river, the beloved, separation, longing—to evoke emotional truths too large for direct statement. Khyal, the Sufi-influenced poetic mode, teaches that the deepest feelings require oblique expression. When public tragedy occurs, conventional language fails: 'I'm so sad' cannot hold the magnitude of collective mourning. Mirabai's example shows that shared grief finds voice in poetry, song, ritual, and art rather than prose explanations. Creating space for this poetic, metaphorical expression within collective mourning allows deeper processing than public statements or hashtags. The examined heart can craft or share language that approaches the unspeakable—not to solve grief but to honor its complexity. In khyal tradition, saying the thing sideways often says it more truly than direct declaration. This framework validates the artistic and musical outpourings that emerge during public tragedy.

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