Structured time markers—funerals, memorial days, anniversaries—that acknowledge grief's nonlinear journey and create permission for grief to resurface and be re-honored.
Mirabai's grief for Krishna was not a single event to 'move past' but a lifelong orientation—one that deepened, shifted, and resurged across decades. Grief rituals across cultures recognize that mourning is not linear but cyclical, and they mark time accordingly. A funeral provides the first acknowledgment; a memorial service weeks later extends it; anniversaries, birthdays, holidays create recurring occasions to revisit and re-grieve. These temporal markers accomplish crucial psychological work: they legitimize the fact that grief doesn't end but transforms. A person who 'should be over it' by now receives permission, through ritual, to grieve again. Seasons, anniversaries, and life transitions inevitably resurrect grief—and rituals create sacred containers for these re-emergences. The Day of the Dead, Yahrzeit candles, ancestor feasts, and memorial gardens all say: 'This grief will return, and we honor its return.' This concept recognizes that grief rituals work not as one-time events but as repeated practices that honor grief's natural rhythm and ensure that loss is never permanently sealed away.
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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