Mirabai's practice of channeling grief into devotional love shows that grief duration depends on whether we transform it into connection rather than containment.
Prema, or divine love in bhakti tradition, represents the active transformation of emotional pain into devotional yearning. Mirabai lived grief perpetually—separation from Krishna, rejection by her family, societal shame—yet she transmuted these sorrows into ecstatic songs and dances. This suggests grief doesn't end by duration but by redirection. When we pour our grief into love for something transcendent, whether divine or deeply meaningful, we don't erase the pain; we give it purpose and expression. The concept challenges the Western notion that grief should resolve into closure. Instead, Mirabai demonstrates that grief lasts as long as we mourn in isolation, but transforms when channeled through love, devotion, and creative expression. The examined heart discovers that grief and love are often two faces of the same attachment.
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