Mirabai's devotion persisted beyond conventional definitions of relationship; this framework helps children understand that the essence of what they loved continues even as its form changes.
Mirabai's love for Krishna existed independent of conventional relationship structures—she was married to another man, lived in a specific time and place, yet her primary devotion transcended these forms. She accessed the essence of what she loved (the divine, beauty, truth, presence) through multiple channels. For grieving children, this is liberating: the person they lost—whether a parent, grandparent, or friend—was more than their physical presence. The qualities they embodied, the values they taught, their characteristic way of seeing the world—these continue accessible. A child might feel their deceased parent's presence in their own moral choices, in a song, in moments of courage or kindness. The form has changed (no longer can they hug this person, hear their voice directly), but the essence remains transmissible. Adults guided by this concept help children identify and name the qualities of the person they've lost, then notice where those qualities show up in the world and in themselves. This shifts grief from being about the absence of a person to being about honoring and embodying what that person represented.
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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