Using writing, song, or artistic expression as a deliberate spiritual discipline to metabolize anticipatory grief and deepen understanding of love and mortality.
Sahitya-sadhana means "spiritual practice through literature and song." Mirabai composed hundreds of devotional poems, many dwelling on Krishna's absence and her longing. She transformed her inner world into art as a spiritual discipline—not catharsis alone, but a structured practice of presence and discovery. For anticipatory grief, sahitya-sadhana offers a framework: writing letters you may never send, composing poems about what you wish to say, creating rituals of remembrance. This is not journaling for emotional release, though that may occur. Rather, it is treating artistic expression as sadhana—a daily commitment to meet grief consciously, to find language for the unsayable, to honor the person through creation. The practice structures time, channels intensity, and creates a record of love and presence. Mirabai's songs endure because they were not written to hide pain but to consecrate it, to make grief a bridge between human and divine. Your own expression does the same: it makes anticipatory grief meaningful.
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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