The understanding that love doesn't end with death or separation; it transforms into an ongoing relationship of memory, longing, and presence that children can actively maintain.
Mirabai sustained her devotion to Krishna across decades of longing and separation, keeping the relationship alive through constant mental and emotional communion. This model directly serves bereaved or separated young people: love doesn't vanish when someone dies or leaves. Instead, it transforms into a practice of remembering, speaking to the absent person, honoring their influence. Children can maintain active relationships with deceased loved ones through ritual (lighting candles, visiting graves, creating altars), conversation (speaking to the person daily), artistic expression (songs, drawings, letters), and inherited practices (cooking their recipes, living their values). This isn't denial of loss but a mature understanding that love is relational energy that persists. Research supports this: young people who maintain active relationships with deceased loved ones show better grief integration. Families can normalize this as spiritual continuation rather than pathology, helping children feel less alone and more connected to their lineage.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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