Recognition that children's grief lives in their bodies—through sickness, restlessness, appetite changes—and requires somatic approaches to healing.
Mirabai's devotional practice was intensely embodied—she danced, sang, moved her body in ecstatic expression. Her path was not purely intellectual or purely emotional; it was visceral and physical. This wisdom applies directly to childhood grief, which manifests in the body long before children have words. Grieving children may experience stomachaches, headaches, changes in sleep or appetite, regression in toilet training, clinginess, or hyperactivity. These are not problems separate from emotional grief; they are grief made physical. Too often, adults treat these symptoms medically or behaviorally while missing the grief underneath. The body-as-keeper framework invites somatic approaches: movement, dance, music, touch, breath work, and play. It means recognizing that a child running wildly might be expressing rage they cannot name. That a child who suddenly wants to be held is seeking physical reassurance about safety. That a child who refuses to eat is expressing a loss of appetite for life itself. Supporting grieving children requires helping them express through their bodies what their words cannot yet reach. This might include dance therapy, guided movement, hand-on-hand art-making, or simply permission to be physically present and messy in their grief.
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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