Using devotional song, poetry, and voice to name and release anticipatory grief rather than containing it silently.
Kirtana—the singing and chanting of devotion—was Mirabai's primary practice for expressing love, longing, and devotion. Applied to anticipatory grief, kirtana becomes a container for feelings that are too large for silence. By articulating your grief through voice, movement, writing, or song, you give it form and presence rather than letting it fester in unspoken dread. Kirtana recognizes that grief unsung hardens into despair; grief expressed through devotional practice becomes a bridge between you and the person, and between you and something transcendent. This might mean literally singing to the person you fear losing, writing poems of longing and love, or simply speaking their name and your fear aloud in a space of reverence. Kirtana teaches that full-throated expression of love—including the love born from the fear of loss—honors both the person and your own humanity. The voice is how we remain connected.
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