Cultivating the witness-friend perspective within yourself to observe anticipatory grief without being consumed by it.
Sakhi bhava, the inner companionship of a trusted friend, is Mirabai's psychological framework for self-witnessing. Rather than identifying completely with anticipatory grief, you develop an inner observer—a gentle, non-judgmental presence within yourself. This sakhi watches your fear, your sadness, your resistance without requiring you to fix or suppress it. In bhakti practice, the sakhi represents the part of you connected to something larger than your individual loss. When anticipatory grief overwhelms you, sakhi bhava creates internal space: you can feel the grief fully while simultaneously being held by a witnessing consciousness. This dual awareness—feeling deeply while observing compassionately—is not dissociation but integration. It allows you to remain present with the person you fear losing without collapsing into despair, holding both the sweetness of their aliveness and the reality of impermanence together.
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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