Mirabai's ecstatic devotion moved through the body; grief rituals across cultures use physical gesture, sound, and movement to embody and validate loss.
Mirabai's spiritual practice was radically embodied: her dancing, her song, her tears—the physical overflow of an examined heart. Grief rituals universally recognize that loss lives in the body and must be expressed through the body to be truly processed. Jewish mourners rend their garments; Irish keeners wail and keen; Hindu funeral rites include bathing, wrapping, and carrying the body; West African traditions feature rhythmic movement and vocal expression. These practices accomplish something purely intellectual work cannot: they give grief a voice in flesh, acknowledging that bereavement is not merely psychological but somatic. The body grieves; rituals provide sanctioned languages for that bodily expression. Mirabai understood that devotion cannot remain in the mind—it must sing, move, and dance itself into being. Similarly, grief rituals teach that loss lived in the body must be witnessed and honored through the body. When communities gather to move, cry, sing, and touch in prescribed ways, they validate grief's physical reality and begin its integration through embodied presence.
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