The capacity to fully observe and honor collective grief while maintaining inner steadiness, preventing empathic overwhelm or spiritual bypassing.
Sakshi bhava—the witness consciousness—allows us to observe joy and sorrow with equanimity, present to both without being consumed by either. This does not mean coldness; Mirabai wept genuinely while also maintaining a deeper witnessing presence. In collective grief, sakshi bhava becomes essential. Media cycles, social media amplification, and public mourning can create empathic overwhelm or compulsive engagement. Sakshi bhava invites us to hold what is true—yes, this loss matters, yes, I grieve—while also maintaining witnessing clarity. We can honor the dead without losing ourselves in performative grief. We can feel collective sorrow while questioning narratives and examining our own relationship to public figures. The examined heart practices sakshi bhava by asking: What am I truly feeling versus what am I absorbing from collective narratives? How do I remain present to real loss while maintaining inner steadiness?
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