In a culture of forgetting, choosing to remember the deceased consciously is an act of resistance and fidelity.
Mirabai refused to disappear into convention—she sang her love loudly, visibly, persistently, making herself and her devotion unforgettable. Remembrance in our age requires similar defiance. Cultural pressures push us toward distraction and moving on; the news cycle displaces tragedy with the next crisis. To remember deliberately—to speak names aloud, to tell stories, to mark anniversaries, to keep work alive—becomes an act of resistance. Remembrance says: you mattered, your life changed ours, we refuse to let you become erased. This is particularly crucial for lives marginalized or forgotten by dominant culture—those whose deaths received less witness, whose contributions were undervalued. Mirabai's fierce devotion models remembrance as love made active and visible. Create rituals of remembrance: speak names, share stories, carry forward values, support causes aligned with their vision. This is not morbid dwelling but honoring fidelity—a way of saying that love persists beyond death and that their influence continues shaping our choices.
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