Sakhi bhava is the emotional stance of witnessing another's experience with tender, non-judgmental attention—a practice for both giving and receiving in grief.
Sakhi bhava, the attitude of the friend or witness, is one of the nine emotional postures in bhakti practice. It embodies tender, non-possessive attention. In Mirabai's devotional poetry, she often addresses herself as sakhi to Krishna—a confidante, a close companion present to his reality without demanding anything in return. For grief-work, sakhi bhava is both a receiving and a giving practice. When grief isolates you, the sakhi is the friend or community member who can sit with your loss without trying to fix it, who witnesses your creative struggle without judgment. Equally, sakhi bhava teaches you how to be present to others' griefs. In making from loss, you become a sakhi to others who have grieved—your art, your honesty, your presence becomes a form of witnessing that says: your pain is real, it matters, you are not alone. This mutual witnessing is healing. The practice: develop sakhi bhava toward yourself first—be your own tender witness—then extend it to others and receive it from those who love you.
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