Mirabai's embodied devotion—dancing, singing, ecstatic practice—as a model for honoring collective grief through the body, not just mind.
Mirabai expressed her devotion through the body: she danced, sang, and was reportedly in ecstatic states. She refused to contain her love in private piety. Collective grief in modern cultures often asks us to contain our response—to mourn quietly, privately, with composure. But grief is an embodied experience: tears, heaviness, the need to move and express. Mirabai's model suggests that collective mourning needs embodied practices: shared songs, rituals, processions, spaces to cry together. The body remembers and grieves in ways the mind alone cannot access. When a public figure dies, we see glimpses of this in spontaneous gatherings, flowers left at sites, shared songs and silence. These embodied practices are not excessive or irrational; they're essential to collective grief. Mirabai teaches that when we honor grief through our bodies together—singing, moving, gathering—we create genuine communion and allow the loss to be fully integrated into our shared life.
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