Mirabai's devotion involved the body—dancing, singing, ecstatic movement; grief lived in flesh becomes material for somatic creative expression.
Mirabai didn't merely think about her devotion; she danced it, sang it, moved through it with her whole body. Her bhakti was embodied practice. Similarly, grief lives in the body—it lives in the throat that wants to cry, the chest that feels compressed, the hands that want to make something, the feet that want to move. Much Western grief work emphasizes cognitive and emotional processing, but the body holds memory that language cannot access. Creative practices that engage the body—movement, voice, gesture, making with the hands—can access and express dimensions of grief that thinking alone cannot reach. This framework honors the somatic truth that loss is not an idea but a physical reality. By giving our grief body-expression through dance, song, visual creation, or any embodied practice, we honor the wholeness of what we've experienced and access creative power that bypasses the censoring intellect.
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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