Mirabai's persistent questioning and protest offer young people permission to ask radical questions about loss, meaning, and the nature of love itself.
Mirabai's relationship with Krishna was built on questions: Why are you absent? Why do you test me? How can I love what I cannot hold? She refused easy answers. For young people grieving, this concept legitimizes the existential questions that loss provokes: Why did this happen? Why them? What is the point of love if it ends in loss? Why must I endure this? These questions are not signs of lacking faith or weakness; they are sacred inquiry. Young people need space to question without being offered premature consolation or theological explanation. The practice of sacred questioning invites them to sit with mystery, to voice their protest, to explore what grief reveals about love, mortality, meaning, and connection. This questioning is itself transformative. Rather than demanding answers, young people learn to let the questions work on them, to notice how asking "Why do we grieve?" leads to "Because love is real." Mirabai's model shows that spiritual depth grows not from having answers but from honoring the profound questions that loss awakens.
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