Mirabai's poetry arose from deep spiritual silence; grief, too, must sometimes be held in silence before it can be expressed creatively.
Mirabai's devotional songs emerged from hours of meditation and internal dialogue with the divine. There was silence before the song. Similarly, grief requires periods of silence—not the silence of suppression, but the pregnant silence where transformation occurs. In contemporary culture, there is pressure to narrate loss quickly, to "process" and "share" immediately. Yet creative breakthroughs often require sitting in the wordlessness of grief, letting it deepen and work on you before you try to shape it into art. This silence is not emptiness but fullness: the presence of absence, the weight of what cannot yet be spoken. Mirabai understood that song emerges from this silence, not as an escape from it but as its natural expression. For grievers creating, this means honoring the quiet periods, trusting that continued inner work will eventually find form. The silence is part of the creative process, not a delay of it.
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