Mirabai's devotion unfolded in community; she teaches that anticipatory grief needs witnessing companions who can hold space without rushing toward false comfort.
Mirabai danced and sang her grief and love in public, among fellow devotees. She did not hide her passion or her pain. The bhakti tradition honors sangha—community—as essential to the path. In anticipatory grief, we often isolate: we don't want to burden others, we fear judgment, we're unsure how to name what we're feeling. Yet anticipatory grief festers in silence and demands witness. A sangha for anticipatory grief is not a group that tries to fix you or distract you or offer false hope. It is companions who can sit with the paradox: yes, this person is alive; yes, we are grieving them. Mirabai teaches that shared vulnerability deepens truth-telling. In sangha, anticipatory grief becomes less singular, less shameful. You hear others name similar fears. You realize you're not broken. You practice aloud what it means to love someone while preparing for their death. The witness—whether friend, group, or guide—offers something profound: the message that your complicated love is worth attention, worth being seen.
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