Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Permanence of Longing in Ritual Practice

Mirabai never resolved her devotional longing for Krishna; grief rituals accomplish integration not by ending grief but by creating ongoing, sustainable relationship with the absent beloved.

Mira
Why It Matters

A significant insight from Mirabai's spiritual biography is that her longing was never resolved—she did not achieve permanent union with Krishna or overcome her ache for him. Instead, her entire life became an extended practice of love expressed through longing itself. This offers grief rituals a radically different goal: not the extinction of grief or the achievement of closure, but the creation of a sustainable, transformed relationship with absence. Many Western grief models, influenced by Kübler-Ross, imply that mourning should move through stages toward acceptance and release. Yet cultures with deep ritual traditions often accomplish something different—they create ongoing structures for maintaining relationship with the dead. Ancestor veneration, memorial practices, ritual anniversaries, and devotional observances accomplish the psychological work of keeping the beloved present while acknowledging they are no longer here. Mirabai's examined heart suggests that this paradoxical presence-in-absence is not a failure to move on but a deepening of love itself. Grief rituals that accomplish this sustain longing as a living practice rather than a problem to solve. They permit mourners to carry their loss not as a burden but as an ongoing relationship, transformed but real, temporary in its acute intensity but permanent in its presence.

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