Sahitya means literature and witness; Mirabai's poems are her testimony. Speaking and writing your grief story acknowledges its reality and honors your former self.
Sahitya refers to literature, poetry, and the art of witnessing through language. Mirabai's bhakti poetry served as her testimony—a record of her inner truth that later generations could witness and learn from. When you grieve lost identity, silence can deepen the wound; your story remains unwitnessed and therefore incomplete. Sahitya practice invites you to articulate your grief: write the story of who you were, how you changed, what that loss meant. This isn't therapeutic journaling alone; it's creating a testimony, a record that says: I existed as this person; that person mattered; this loss is real and worth remembering. By creating sahitya around your grief, you stop being a victim of circumstances and become a witness to your own life. Your testimony becomes a bridge between your past self and future self. Writing transforms isolated pain into potentially meaningful narrative that honors what was while acknowledging what's becoming.
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