Mirabai elevated her grief to the level of spiritual practice, reframing children's mourning as a legitimate path to meaning and connection.
Mirabai's sorrow was not separate from her spirituality—it was her spirituality. Her tears, longing, and heartbreak were sacred acts of devotion. In dominant grief cultures, especially for children, sorrow is often medicalized or pathologized: something to cure, overcome, or process quickly. Mirabai's bhakti tradition offers an alternative: grief as a legitimate spiritual path. This doesn't mean romanticizing loss or suggesting that death is "meant to be." Rather, it means honoring that profound sorrow can open the heart, deepen compassion, and connect a child to something larger than individual pain. Supporting a grieving child through this lens might include: exploring spiritual or existential questions the loss raises, creating rituals that honor both the person and the sorrow, acknowledging how loss teaches about impermanence and interconnection, and recognizing that the child's capacity to love deeply—the very thing that creates devastating grief—is also their greatest spiritual gift. Mirabai teaches that a heart broken open by loss is not a damaged heart; it is an awakened one.
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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