Sadhana—spiritual discipline and daily practice—provides the steady container that allows grief to be metabolized through creation rather than accumulating as trauma or numbness.
Sadhana is the dedicated, often daily practice through which a bhakti devotee deepens relationship with the divine. Mirabai's entire life was sadhana—singing, dancing, meditating on Krishna became her way of moving through her grief and constraints. Sadhana is not about perfection or achievement; it is about showing up consistently, allowing repetition to gradually transform consciousness and channel emotion toward something sacred. When grieving, sadhana becomes crucial: the daily practice of writing, making, moving, or creating gives grief a form and a rhythm. Without sadhana, grief can become stuck—obsessive, numbing, or destructive. With it, grief flows through you and becomes integrated. Your creative practice becomes both anchor (something stable to return to) and vessel (a container for what wants to move through you). The discipline itself—not the perfection of the output—is what heals and transforms.
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