Mirabai's bhakti tradition reveals that grief's intensity is proportional to love's depth, reframing children's pain as evidence of their capacity for connection.
In bhakti devotion, the deepest love produces the deepest longing and sorrow. Mirabai's poetry demonstrates that her anguish for Krishna was inseparable from her love for Krishna. For grieving children, this insight is transformative: their pain is not weakness but a measure of how much they loved the person who died. This reframes grief from something to overcome into something to honor. When supporting young people, this concept allows adults to say: 'Your sadness shows how much you loved them.' Rather than pathologizing intense grief, the bhakti lens celebrates it as fidelity to love itself. Children can learn that their grief is not an obstacle to healing but a pathway through it. Mirabai's life demonstrates that living fully with grief—rather than escaping it—is the truest form of devotion to those we've lost.
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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