The practice of conscious remembrance and storytelling in grief as a form of puja (worship) that honors the departed and sustains their subtle presence.
In shraddha practice, specific remembrance is a form of worship. Telling stories of the departed, recalling their qualities, singing songs in their honor—these are acts of puja that feed their subtle body and acknowledge their continued presence in the family's consciousness. Mirabai's devotional poetry models this: through language and emotion, the beloved becomes ever-present. Grievers who engage in conscious remembrance during and after antyesti rituals understand that memory is not mere nostalgia but active veneration. Speaking the departed's name, recalling their wisdom, sharing their legacy—these sustain a living relationship. Shraddha becomes less about appeasing a ghost and more about consciously inviting the ancestor's blessing and presence into the family's ongoing life. The griever becomes a storyteller, a keeper of memory, a link between past and future. This transforms grief from private anguish into shared sacred practice that honors the continuity of lineage.
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