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Concept
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Ritual as Conversation With the Dead

Mirabai's poetry as direct address to Krishna models how grief rituals accomplish ongoing dialogue with the deceased, maintaining relationship beyond physical presence.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's verses speak directly to Krishna—not about him, but to him—creating an intimate conversation across the veil of separation. This addresses one profound purpose of grief rituals across cultures: they establish the deceased as conversation partner rather than closed memory. The Día de Muertos poem left on the altar, the Jewish Kaddish prayer spoken for the dead, the Buddhist sutras chanted to guide the consciousness—these accomplish what Mirabai's poetry accomplishes: they keep the beloved present through direct address. The ritual speaker is not merely remembering; they are communicating. This transforms grief from passive loss into active relationship. By maintaining the dead as someone-to-speak-to rather than someone-no-longer-here, rituals prevent the final abandonment that griever's fear. Mirabai shows that the dead remain our teachers, our lovers, our challengers—and ritual is the language through which that ongoing conversation occurs.

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