Creating and sharing artistic expression—song, poetry, witness—as spiritual practice and method of cultural preservation.
Mirabai's poems are her primary legacy: testimony to her devotion, her resistance, her humanity. They have survived centuries because they are not arguments but songs—they move through hearts directly. In times of anticipatory grief for civilization, artistic expression becomes more than personal catharsis; it becomes testimony and transmission. By writing, singing, creating, and sharing our experience of civilizational change, we honor what is passing, create meaning from loss, and offer anchors to others navigating similar terrain. Songs preserve what statistics cannot; they transmit emotional and spiritual knowledge across generations. A single poem about grief for a species loss teaches more deeply than a scientific paper. By embracing our role as witnesses and artists—whether we consider ourselves accomplished or not—we participate in the essential human work of meaning-making. Mirabai never intended to become famous; she simply sang what was true. Our songs need not aim for recognition; they need only be honest and offered.
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