The practice of chanting and naming loss aloud (kirtana) as a means to metabolize grief across years without suppression.
Kirtana—devotional chanting and singing—was Mirabai's primary practice. She did not write her grief into private journals; she sang it publicly, repeatedly, across decades. This externalization is crucial: grief metabolized only internally can calcify into bitterness or numbness. When we speak, sing, or name our loss again and again, we prevent it from becoming a secret wound. Each time we articulate "I miss you" or "This hurts," we acknowledge grief's reality without demanding it disappear. Kirtana creates ritual space for grief's repetition. Over years, the words may change subtly—from "Why did you leave?" to "Where are you now?" to "I understand you differently"—but the practice of speaking keeps the relationship alive and evolving. The examined heart discovers that grief's transformation requires regular vocalization. Silence and privacy can trap us; naming and community move us. Kirtana suggests that grief is meant to be sung, not solved.
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