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Concept
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Nirgun Bhakti: Love Without Form or Answer

Nirgun means without attributes or form; this path of devotion loves what cannot be grasped, mirroring the paradox of grieving an absence that was once presence.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's devotion existed in both saguna (with form—Krishna as lover, musician, deity) and nirgun (without form—the divine as formless mystery). Nirgun bhakti is the practice of loving what cannot be seen, touched, or fully known. This has profound relevance for grief: when we lose someone, we lose their physical presence but not the fact of having loved them. We grieve the invisible. Nirgun bhakti teaches that this love of absence, of formlessness, of what cannot be grasped is valid and complete. In creative practice, nirgun provides a framework for working with loss that cannot be resolved. We cannot bring the dead back or undo what was lost. But like Mirabai singing to her invisible Krishna, we can create from the longing itself. The formlessness becomes the point. Grief expressed through nirgun practice honors the way loss remains irresolute, irreplaceable, and transformative precisely because it cannot be recovered.

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