Using memory practices not to restore the past but to preserve its wisdom for what comes next.
Smarana—remembrance, invoking—was central to Mirabai's practice. She remembered Krishna constantly, not to escape the present but to remain connected to what mattered across time. Applied to civilizational anticipatory grief, smarana becomes a practice of remembering forward: actively preserving the knowledge, stories, values, and ways of knowing that are being lost so they can inform what emerges. This is different from nostalgia or restoration fantasy. It is the conscious work of documenting languages, traditional practices, ecological knowledge, and cultural wisdom before they disappear. It honors what has lived while accepting that it cannot return unchanged. Smarana recognizes that future humans will need to remember us and our knowledge. By practicing remembrance now, we become custodians for those who come after. This transforms anticipatory grief into a form of care across time, creating bridges between what was, what is, and what will be.
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