Grant children explicit permission to miss, yearn for, and desire reunion with the deceased, normalizing longing as natural and spiritual rather than pathological.
Mirabai's poetry is saturated with longing—aching desire for Krishna, restless yearning, the sweetness of missing. Her spiritual power lay not in transcending this longing but diving into it fully. For grieving children, permission to long is often denied. Well-meaning adults say, 'They're in a better place,' or 'You need to be strong,' inadvertently teaching children to suppress yearning. This framework invites the opposite: radical permission to long. A child can miss their mother intensely while accepting she has died. Longing doesn't contradict acceptance; it exists alongside it. Adults can validate this by asking: What do you miss most? What would you tell them if you could? When do you miss them hardest? Creating rituals that honor longing—lighting a candle and speaking to the person, writing unsent letters, creating a memory jar—legitimizes yearning as sacred rather than shameful. Over time, as longing integrates into a child's identity, its quality softens from sharp pain toward bittersweet remembrance.
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