Recognition that even in decline and loss, the sacred persists in relationships, practices, and moments, worthy of protection and celebration.
Mirabai found divinity not in institutional religion or social approval but in direct experience, in the ordinary moments of devotion and presence. Her spirituality located the sacred in what remained available: song, love, the examined heart, communion with others who understood. For anticipatory grief, this concept resists the collapse into total nihilism or despair. Even as we acknowledge real losses and genuine dangers, we practice seeing and protecting the sacred that persists: a conversation that awakens understanding, a meal shared with attention, a place of beauty, a commitment kept, the courage of another person, the memory of what was. This concept invites deliberate practice: notice what still feels sacred or meaningful, protect those spaces and practices consciously, celebrate them with gratitude, and find others to share them with. The examined heart recognizes both devastation and grace. By locating and tending the sacred in what remains, we do not deny loss but rather create islands of meaning and connection. This practice honors both our grief and our love, and it keeps us alive to the fact that even in civilizational decline, life continues to offer moments worthy of our full presence and devotion.
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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