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Concept
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Sadhana of Presence: The Daily Practice

A structured spiritual discipline adapted from Mirabai's devotional practice, grounding anticipatory grief in repeated, intentional moments of connection.

Mira
Why It Matters

Sadhana means spiritual practice—the daily discipline Mirabai maintained through prayer, song, and movement. Applied to anticipatory grief, sadhana becomes a container for the liminal space between now and loss. Rather than waiting passively, we actively practice presence: daily rituals of listening, storytelling, touch, or silence with the dying person. These might include reading poetry together, recording their voice, preparing meals mindfully, or sitting in shared silence. Mirabai's sadhana was repetitive, humble, and transformative through consistency rather than intensity. In anticipatory grief, sadhana anchors us, prevents existential free-fall, and creates a sacred timeline within the dying process. Each small practice honors both the person and our love, building resilience for what comes after.

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