Mirabai's devotion to the divine as a framework for understanding attachment to public figures and their irretrievable absence.
Mirabai loved Krishna with full consciousness that he was not present, that the love could never be returned in the way human relationships permit. Yet she did not abandon or diminish that love; she deepened it. This paradox illuminates collective grief's strange territory: we mourn people we never met, to whom our love cannot be communicated. We can feel foolish or excessive in our attachment to public figures—they do not know us. Mirabai teaches that the 'impossibility' of love does not diminish its reality or value. The love is real. The absence is real. Both can coexist without resolution. In collective mourning, this framework permits us to honor genuine attachment without shame, to acknowledge that the love was meaningful precisely because it was directed toward something beyond our reach. This paradox opens space for richer collective grief: not the reduction of loss into false intimacy, but the honest acknowledgment that we can be deeply moved by presences we encountered only through their public work.
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