Using devotional practices—song, dance, prayer, offerings—to transform raw grief into meaningful expression and continued relationship with the deceased.
Bhakti traditions use repetitive devotional acts—singing, dancing, making offerings, reciting names—to move energy and emotion through the body and spirit. Mirabai herself used kirtan (devotional singing) as her primary spiritual practice and grief work. For children, bhakti-inspired rituals offer somatic channels for feelings too large for words alone. A young person can create a grief ritual: lighting a candle and singing a simple song for their lost friend, dancing to music that holds their feeling, planting seeds in honor of someone's memory, or creating art as an offering. These practices are not meant to "resolve" grief but to give it sacred form and movement. Bhakti ritual teaches that grief is not a problem to solve but an emotion to honor through the body and community. Group practices—a circle of children singing together for those they've lost, or a community dance honoring the dead—create witnessed, held space for grief that prevents isolation. The rhythmic, repetitive nature of these practices also regulates the nervous system, allowing children's bodies to process trauma while their spirits engage in devotion. This framework integrates grief into spiritual life rather than separating it as pathology.
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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