Mirabai's perpetual devotional practice offers a model where creative work from loss is never finished—it is ongoing dialogue with the beloved.
Mirabai continued singing, writing, and dancing throughout her life. Her devotional work was never 'finished' or 'resolved'—it was an eternal engagement with Krishna. This concept reframes creative work around grief as something that need not resolve or conclude. Rather than trying to 'process' grief and move beyond it, you engage in ongoing creative dialogue with loss. Each new work is not about finally understanding or accepting the loss, but about deepening your relationship with it. This removes the pressure to 'get it right' or reach closure, which can be both false and impossible. Your creative practice becomes a lifetime engagement, evolving as you evolve. The unfinished song suggests that loss is not a problem to solve but a companion to walk with through life. Your ongoing creative work honors this companionship. This framework is liberating: you need not achieve closure; you need only continue showing up, making, offering. This transforms grief from crisis into vocation—a calling that shapes your entire creative life.
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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