Honoring grief anniversaries and triggering dates as legitimate religious observances worthy of ritual, space, and intentional marking.
Religious traditions have always marked sacred days—not all of them joyful. Days of atonement, remembrance, mourning. Mirabai lived within a tradition where devotion required acknowledging both presence and absence. This concept suggests treating grief anniversaries with the same ritualistic weight as religious holidays. When an anniversary approaches, acknowledge it consciously. Clear space. Create a small ritual. Light a candle. Write a letter. Visit a meaningful place. Tell someone you trust. Don't let it pass as an ordinary day. By honoring the date with deliberate attention, you're saying: this loss matters. This person mattered. My grief is sacred. This transforms the anniversary from something that happens to you into something you shape. Instead of being ambushed by grief on the date, you invite it in, prepared and witnessed. You become the priestess of your own mourning, which itself becomes a spiritual practice.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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