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Concept
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The Body's Grief: Embodied Ritual Practice

Physical expressions of mourning—prostration, tearing clothes, dancing, fasting—that allow the body to grieve what the mind struggles to accept.

Mira
Why It Matters

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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