Building intentional spiritual community specifically designed to process anticipatory grief and sustain witness to civilizational change together.
Mirabai's poetry was created in relationship—with Krishna, with her community of devotees, with witnesses to her truth-telling. Sangha—the community of practitioners—becomes essential when civilizational anxiety threatens isolation. A sangha in collapse is not a group denying difficulty but a container specifically organized to grieve together, to refuse individual despair, and to practice sustaining love through shared witness. This community provides validation that grief is appropriate, modeling for one another how to hold both sorrow and continued commitment. In Mirabai's tradition, sangha is not escape but deepened engagement. A sangha for anticipatory grief normalizes difficult conversations, celebrates acts of tending and protection, and practices the disciplines of examined hearts together. When individuals are isolated in their civilizational sorrow, despair compounds. When held in community, grief becomes bearable and even transformative—a shared practice that strengthens rather than isolates.
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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