Holding simultaneously that we did not know these public figures personally, yet our grief is profoundly real and meaningful.
Modern mourning creates a peculiar paradox: we grieve people we never met as if we knew them intimately. Mirabai's tradition helps dissolve this contradiction by suggesting that intimacy operates on multiple levels. Mirabai never met Krishna physically, yet her connection was the most intimate of her life. Similarly, we may not have known a public figure personally, yet their work, art, words, or presence touched our soul. This is not false grief; it is love operating through medium and symbol rather than direct relationship. The paradox teaches us that grief for public figures is simultaneously particular and universal—particular to our individual connection with them, universal in the human need to witness, honor, and mourn those whose lives move us. When we accept this paradox rather than defend against it, we can grieve more freely. We acknowledge that meaningful connection transcends proximity, that being moved by someone's existence is a form of genuine relationship, and that our tears are just as valid whether we knew them or not.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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