The practice of kirtan (call-and-response devotional singing) transforms anticipatory grief into expression and collective witnessing, rather than isolation.
Mirabai sang her love and longing publicly, in the temple, in the street. Kirtan—the call-and-response singing of devotional poetry—was her alchemy. When grief is locked in the private chamber of the heart, it calcifies and becomes heavier. When it is sung, spoken, witnessed by others, it moves. The practice of kirtan invites us to give voice to anticipatory grief in community. This need not be literal singing (though it can be); it can be: speaking your fear aloud to a trusted person, writing and sharing what you cannot say, finding others who understand. Mirabai teaches that expression in the presence of witness—whether divine or human—is itself healing. The act of singing (or speaking, or writing) your truth about losing someone before they die creates space around the grief. It becomes less a private nightmare and more a shared human experience. Kirtan reminds us that we do not have to carry this alone, and that voice—the capacity to articulate what moves through us—is itself a form of freedom and grace.
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