Surati is remembrance or mindful recollection; grief-work becomes an act of devotion through how you recall and honor the lost.
Surati—remembrance, conscious recollection—is central to bhakti practice. Mirabai kept Krishna alive in her heart and her songs through devoted remembrance; she did not seek to forget or move on but to deepen her relationship with his memory. Surati as a practice invites you to remember the person or time you've lost not as a way of dwelling in grief but as an act of love and honour. This is different from rumination; surati is conscious, intentional, often ritualistic. You might remember through writing, through creating art, through prayer, through visiting places, through telling stories. Surati transforms memory from something that happens to you passively into something you actively practice. In this way, creative work becomes an extended surati—a devotional act of remembrance. Your writing, art, music, or movement is how you keep the beloved alive, how you continue the relationship in a new form. This practice honors both the reality of loss and the ongoing presence of love. Surati teaches that forgetting is not required for healing; deepened, intentional remembrance is.
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