The practice of loving and grieving those we cannot possess, claim, or fully know—the spiritual freedom of unattached devotion.
Mirabai's devotion centered on Radha and Krishna—figures of impossible, unfulfilled love. Radha loved Krishna knowing she could never possess him, could never claim him as her own. This paradoxical love—devotion without possession—illuminates collective grief for public figures and distant tragedies. We mourn people we never knew, never could have known, yet whose absence pierces us. Radha's longing teaches that this apparent paradox is not confusion but spiritual maturity. True devotion doesn't require reciprocal relationship or personal connection. We can love and grieve those we know only through their art, their activism, their example. This freedom from possession-need transforms grief: we're not mourning a relationship we lost but honoring a soul we recognized. For collective grief, this reframes the question from "Did I know them?" to "Did their existence change my soul?" The examined heart grieves not what it possessed but what it was privileged to witness in the world.
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