Creating and sharing expressions of anticipated loss—art, music, ritual, language—that collectively honor civilization's mortality.
Mirabai's devotional songs were not private meditations; they were public expressions that transformed personal grief into collective meaning. Singing sorrow together created communion. For anticipatory grief about civilization, sorrow-song practices—shared art, ritual, poetry, music that names what we are losing—become essential civic acts. These are not displays of defeatism but profound assertions that loss matters, beauty matters, connection matters. Creating sorrow-songs together prevents both individual isolation and collective numbness. They acknowledge reality while strengthening bonds. Indigenous peoples have long held these practices: laments, dirges, grief rituals. Mirabai's tradition shows us that singing what grieves us is not despair; it is love made audible. Civilization deserves its sorrow-songs, its collective witnessing of what passes.
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