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Concept
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Bhakti Practices for Child Grief

Adapted devotional practices—singing, dancing, ritualized remembrance—that help children process grief through embodied spiritual expression.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's bhakti tradition centers practices that engage the whole being: ecstatic song, dance, sensory ritual. These practices can be adapted for grieving children, offering non-verbal pathways for processing loss. A child might sing songs for the deceased, dance their emotions, light candles while speaking memories, or engage in rhythmic movement that mirrors grief's waves. These embodied practices bypass the child's thinking mind and access deeper emotional processing. Singing, in particular, has been shown to regulate the nervous system while allowing emotional expression. Creating family or community rituals of remembrance—singing together, dancing together, tasting foods associated with the deceased—creates containers for collective grief while honoring the child's experience. These practices transform abstract loss into sensory presence and connect the child to a lineage of humans who have grieved through song and movement.

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