A revaluation of activities that produce nothing quantifiable—art, prayer, relationships, beauty, play—as essential to human meaning, especially during collapse.
Mirabai's songs had no economic value; her dancing disturbed productive order; her poetry challenged rather than served power. Yet these acts of apparent uselessness were where her freedom and authenticity lived. Civilizational collapse often accelerates the devaluation of whatever cannot be monetized or leveraged for survival. Against this, the examined heart recognizes sacred uselessness: the value of singing together, of making beauty amid ruin, of prayer and contemplation, of time spent in relationship without outcome. These practices are not luxuries to be abandoned in crisis; they are what preserve humaneness through transition. As economic systems falter, communities that have cultivated meaning through art, ritual, and relational depth will be more resilient than those that reduced life to productivity metrics. Mirabai's life shows that spiritual devotion—utterly useless by capitalist standards—can be the most sustaining force. In anticipatory grief work, we deliberately cultivate what cannot be sold, measured, or optimized, recognizing these as the anchors of continuity and the seeds of what comes after.
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