Hold the paradox of Radha-Krishna—simultaneous absence and presence—as a model for relating to civilization's uncertain future.
Mirabai's tradition centers Radha-Krishna: eternal lovers separated and eternally united, absent and present simultaneously. This paradox is not contradiction but depth. Civilization may be facing transformation or collapse; both absence (loss of certain futures) and presence (ongoing life, beauty, struggle) are real. The Radha-Krishna paradox teaches that we need not resolve this tension into false certainty. We can simultaneously grieve what may be lost and remain present to what is actually here. This paradox prevents both toxic optimism (denying loss) and fatalism (treating loss as inevitable). It teaches a both-and consciousness: Yes, civilizational structures may fail. Yes, life continues. Yes, we suffer. Yes, we love. By holding this paradox as sacred rather than as cognitive dissonance, we develop the psychological flexibility needed to navigate genuine uncertainty without fragmenting.
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