The understanding that deep grief opens children to spiritual insight, connection to something larger than themselves, and experiences of transcendence amid pain.
Mirabai's sorrow for her absent beloved became her doorway to direct spiritual experience. In the depths of longing, she encountered the divine. This concept, grounded in bhakti philosophy, suggests that grief—while acutely painful—can also crack open young people's consciousness to dimensions beyond the personal and temporal. A child sitting in raw loss may experience: moments of unexpected peace, vivid dreams of the deceased, a felt sense of presence, or sudden clarity about life's meaning. Some find spiritual community or practices (prayer, meditation, ritual) that provide container and meaning. Others feel connected to humanity's universal experience of loss. Rather than pathologizing these experiences or insisting grief is purely psychological, this concept honors grief as potentially spiritually significant. It suggests that the worst experiences in life can paradoxically be among the most transformative. A young person finding meaning, connection, or transcendence in their sorrow isn't escaping reality but integrating it at a deeper level.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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