Creative work as simultaneous act of witnessing one's own grief and being witnessed by others, creating relational healing through shared meaning.
Mirabai sang her bhakti poetry aloud, in public, in temples. Her songs were not private journal entries but utterances meant to be heard. They witnessed her own transformation while inviting others into that same space of sacred yearning. This concept honors the dual function of creative work made from loss: it witnesses your own experience back to you (making meaning from chaos), while also offering witness to others who have endured similar ruptures. When you write about your mother's death, you are both documenting your interior landscape and saying to others: this breaking is real, it matters, you are not alone in it. The song becomes a container—a place where grief is held with dignity. For makers working from loss, this suggests that the work need not be private or hidden. Public utterance is itself part of the healing: it transforms isolation into communion. The song does not fix grief; it sanctifies it by speaking it aloud.
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