Prema bhakti is devotional love as a practice—not a feeling to chase but a committed way of honoring what has been lost through sustained creative engagement.
Prema bhakti—the yoga of love-devotion—treats love not as an emotion but as a conscious practice and commitment. Mirabai's relationship with Krishna was not passive yearning but active, defiant love expressed through song, movement, and radical life choices. Prema bhakti suggests that after loss, we can sustain our love through conscious devotional practice: the daily act of remembering, creating, honoring, and speaking the name or essence of what we have lost. This is not denial or refusal to move forward, but a mature commitment to the ongoing reality of love. In creative practice, prema bhakti means showing up regularly to make work honoring your grief—not because you expect to "feel better," but because love demands expression. The practice itself becomes the pathway. This reframes creative work born from loss as a form of sustained devotion, a disciplined love-offering. Over time, the practice changes you, not by erasing grief but by deepening your capacity to love what is no longer present.
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