The practice of using devotional writing—poetry, prose, lament—to externalize grief for lost identity and transform it into wisdom literature.
Sahitya means literature and poetry; Mirabai's own sahitya—her verses—became the means through which she processed devotional longing, defiance, and love. Writing your way through grief honors her model. When you lose an identity, the grief remains internal and abstract until you externalize it. Write laments for who you were. Write prayers on behalf of your former self. Write the story of your transformation as if it were a sacred text. Sahitya practice isn't about creating publishable work; it's about moving grief from your chest to the page. The act of naming, describing, and witnessing your former self through language creates psychological distance that allows integration. Mirabai's poetry survived centuries because she transformed personal pain into universal wisdom. Your writing needn't be published to do the same private work: it witnesses your grief as sacred, honors your former self as worthy of literature, and marks your transformation as a story worth telling.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.