The insight that anticipatory grief, while painful, forces us into radical presence with the living person—a gift hidden within the pain.
Mirabai's grief over Krishna's absence paradoxically made her acutely present to any sign of him—a peacock feather, a flute sound, a memory. Her longing sharpened her perception. Anticipatory grief contains this same paradox: the knowledge that someone will die can strip away pretense and distraction, making each interaction precious. When you know someone is dying, you stop wasting time on resentment about old arguments. You notice their hands. You listen to their stories differently. This presence is not morbid; it's clarifying. Many people who have sat with dying loved ones report that this time, though heartbreaking, became sacred. The paradox is that we often need the awareness of mortality to truly show up. The practice becomes: use your anticipatory grief as a teacher. Let it remind you, daily, that this person will not always be here. Let that awareness soften you into presence.
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