Physical expressions of mourning—prostration, tearing clothes, dancing, fasting—that allow the body to grieve what the mind struggles to accept.
Mirabai's ecstatic devotion involved the entire body: dancing, swaying, physical abandonment to emotion. Grief rituals across cultures recognize that sorrow lives in the body and must be expressed physically to be truly processed. Islamic funeral prayer involves specific postures; Hindu cremation practices include prescribed movements; many cultures include fasting, sleep deprivation, or the wearing of specific clothing as bodily expressions of mourning. These embodied practices accomplish what intellectual understanding cannot: they allow the griever's flesh to acknowledge the reality of loss. The examined heart is not only a metaphor but a felt experience in the chest, the throat, the belly. Rituals that engage the body—through movement, physical labor in grave-digging or tomb-tending, or the kinesthetic experience of procession—create a somatic knowing that complements emotional and spiritual understanding. This framework recognizes that Western culture's emphasis on emotional expression often neglects the body's wisdom; grief rituals that deliberately involve physical practice ensure that mourning is whole-person work, integrating intellect, emotion, spirit, and flesh into a unified grieving process.
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