Moving beyond ego-centered grief narratives to witness how tragedy illuminates universal suffering and interconnection across all beings.
Mirabai transcended the personal narrative of a woman scorned or abandoned; instead, her loss became a doorway to cosmic consciousness. Her poems don't center her ego but rather use personal pain to access universal truths about longing, separation, and divine love. When applied to collective grief, this framework suggests moving beyond the story of "I am sad because X happened" toward recognition of universal impermanence and shared vulnerability. Collective mourning becomes meaningful not through personal connection to the deceased but through recognition that all beings face loss, all lives are precarious, all love is shadowed by mortality. This transcendence doesn't dismiss personal grief—it contextualizes it within a larger view of existence. Practicing this perspective in collective mourning means meditating on mortality, studying how other cultures honor death, and consciously opening our hearts to the reality that suffering is universal. This shift from personal to universal can paradoxically deepen compassion while reducing the isolation of individual grief.
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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