When life is cut short, the unfulfilled potential becomes a teacher about impermanence and responsibility.
Mirabai's beloved Krishna was eternally absent—never fully present, always somewhat beyond reach. This unfinished yearning became her teacher. When public figures die before their time, or tragedies leave projects undone, we confront the unfinished. Rather than treating this only as loss, Mirabai's tradition suggests receiving it as instruction. What did they leave incomplete? What do their unfinished works teach about what still needs doing? A young artist's death reminds us that beauty requires our cultivation now. A activist's interruption calls us to their unfinished work. This is not burden but invitation—the deceased becomes mentor through absence, pointing toward what the living are called to continue. Examining what remains undone develops humility about impermanence and agency about our own time. The unfinished becomes sacred: a wound that teaches, a gap that summons us toward meaning-making and completion of what matters most.
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