Transform anticipatory grief into active devotion through daily practices of singing, speaking, and honoring the dying person as sacred presence.
Mirabai's bhakti was not passive sentiment; it was embodied practice. She sang, danced, wrote, moved through the world in constant dialogue with the divine beloved. Anticipatory grief can become prema bhakti—active devotion to the living person in their final season. This means: sing to them (literally or metaphorically), speak your love aloud rather than silently, write letters you may or may not send, create rituals of presence. Treat them not as a person who is leaving but as a sacred presence deserving your full devotion now. This is not denial of dying; it is the opposite. By practicing bhakti toward them, you consecrate the time remaining. You stop negotiating with death and start celebrating life. Mirabai did not sit passively waiting for Krishna; she sang him into presence through her own creative act. Similarly, you can sing the dying person into presence: not to keep them alive, but to fully meet them as they are, where they are. This active devotion transforms anticipatory grief from a waiting room into a temple.
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