Following Mirabai's radical honesty, speaking the specific truth of your loss on anniversary dates—to others or in writing—as an act of fidelity.
Mirabai's poems were testimonies: they refused polite abstraction and spoke raw, particular truth about her love and her longing. Her specificity—the actual ache in her body, her particular rage at separation, her desperate hope—is what makes her bhakti endure. On grief anniversaries, testimony means naming what you've actually lost: not generic sadness but the specific absence. I have lost the person who always made me laugh on Tuesday mornings. I have lost the voice that called my name. I have lost the hand I could reach for. Specificity honors the individuality of the person who died and the uniqueness of your bond. This testimony might be shared—spoken to a friend, written in a letter, published—or it might be private, carved into a journal or whispered to the wind. The act of testimony itself is transformative: it says 'this loss was real, this person mattered, and I refuse to let their absence be forgotten or minimized.' Mirabai's tradition teaches that speaking truth is a form of devotion, and your grief testimony is your unique love song.
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