The principle that love—not fear or ambition—as the foundation of creative work enables us to create meaningfully from grief and loss.
Mirabai created from love: for Krishna, for truth, for the liberation of her own soul. Love was her source and her shield. This concept proposes that grief-born creativity requires a ground of love rather than fear, perfectionism, or the need to prove something. When we create from unlove (rejection, inadequacy, anger), the work often carries a brittle or aggressive edge. When we create from love—love for what we've lost, love for the deceased, love for beauty itself, love for the truth of our experience—the work has resonance and integrity. Mirabai's devotional poetry is powerful precisely because it flows from overwhelming love. For those grieving, discovering what we still love (in memory, in meaning, in the world) becomes the fuel for creation. Love doesn't deny the pain; it contextualizes it within something larger. From this ground, we create not to escape grief but to honor and celebrate what grief testifies to: that we loved deeply enough to lose greatly.
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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