Mirabai's songs kept Krishna alive in memory; remembering the lost beloved through practice becomes a form of devotion and meaning-making.
Mirabai's thousands of poems and songs function as acts of memory: they keep Krishna vivid, present, alive in the community of devotees. Memory here is not nostalgic reminiscence but sacred practice—a disciplined, repeated act of bringing the beloved into present consciousness. This transforms how we think about grieving. Rather than trying to 'move on' or 'let go,' sacred memory suggests that we actively maintain relationship with what we've lost through ritual, art, conversation, writing. We remember birthdays, anniversaries, favorite songs, stories. We speak the name aloud. We create altars. We write letters. Through these practices, the dead remain our teachers; lost chapters remain alive in our consciousness and our creative work. Memory becomes a form of devotion. The beloved, though absent in body, remains present in our ongoing practice of remembering. This is not morbid dwelling but life-giving continuity—a way of saying: you mattered, you still matter, your life shaped me and I carry you forward.
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