Using the language of absence and yearning—central to Mirabai's poetry—to articulate what we've lost and what we collectively hunger for.
Mirabai's poetry is saturated with longing: for the beloved, for union, for presence in absence. This language of yearning—refined and deepened through centuries of devotional tradition—offers collective grief a sophisticated vocabulary beyond simple sadness. When public figures die, we often feel a complex mix of emotions that defies easy naming: longing for what they might have created, for their presence in the world, for the conversations we'll never have. Mirabai teaches that longing is not weakness but depth—a sign of love's reality and reality's incompleteness. Collective mourning can lean into this language: we long for what was lost, we long for what they stood for, we long for a world where such loss didn't occur. Poetry, song, and letter-writing to the deceased become ways of honoring longing as legitimate grief language. This approach acknowledges that some absences cannot be filled and that our yearning itself—our ache for what's gone—is a profound testimony to love's reality and our own tender hearts.
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