Building on bhakti's emphasis on community devotion, a practice of shared mourning that holds collective emotion without diluting individual truth.
Mirabai sang in temples and courts, among communities of devotees. Bhakti was never purely individual; it was always embedded in sangha, spiritual community. Sangha Grief applies this to collective mourning: when we gather—physically or digitally—to grieve a public loss, we create temporary sacred space. This is not maudlin sentimentality but genuine spiritual practice. In sangha grief, your sorrow is witnessed and held by others, and you witness theirs. This mutual testimony prevents both isolation and the diffusion of feeling into anonymity. Mirabai's example shows that community devotion amplifies authentic emotion; it does not diminish it. When grieving collectively, seek or create spaces where genuine feeling can emerge—whether in gatherings, vigils, or online communities rooted in sincerity. In sangha, individual grief becomes meaningful witness, and isolated pain finds collective dignity.
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