Liberation (mukti) achieved through shared mourning practices that dissolve ego-boundaries and reveal our interconnection.
In bhakti tradition, mukti (liberation) doesn't mean escape from feeling but transformation of feeling through love. Mirabai taught that tears shed in devotion carry liberatory power—they dissolve the illusion of separation. When we mourn public figures or tragedies collectively, we experience temporary mukti: the boundaries between self and other soften; the illusion of individual isolation cracks open; we recognize our shared vulnerability. A moment when a nation weeps together is a moment when the constructed self-concept loosens its grip. Mirabai understood that the path through feeling, not away from it, leads to freedom. Applied to collective grief, mukti suggests that mourning gatherings—candlelight vigils, memorial services, communal artistic responses—aren't just expressions of sadness but practices of liberation. When we cry together for someone we never personally knew, we touch something true about the human condition: our radical interdependence, our mutual mortality, our capacity for compassion across distance. This shared breaking open is its own freedom.
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