Mirabai's ecstatic dancing and bodily transgression as a reclamation of rage through the somatic, countering the dissociation that suppresses it.
Mirabai danced publicly, danced in ecstasy, danced despite her prescribed role as widow and ascetic. Her body became her practice, her rebellion, her prayer. The rage underneath often manifests as somatic dissociation—numbing, disconnection, the sense of being trapped in a prison of flesh that 'shouldn't' feel angry. When grief is socialized as something to manage rationally and quietly, the body becomes the site of resistance. Mirabai's dancing wasn't metaphorical; it was her actual, embodied refusal of constraint. This framework invites us to recognize our body as an intelligent responder to grief and anger, not a problem to overcome. Where does the rage underneath live in your body? In the jaw, clenched and silent? In the hands, trembling with words unsaid? In the feet, restless and unable to settle? Mirabai's model suggests that ecstatic movement, authentic expression through the body, is not indulgence but a essential reclamation of our embodied wholeness. The body that expresses anger fully, through movement and voice, becomes sacred. Conversely, the body forced into stillness and silence becomes a cage, and the rage underneath metastasizes into illness.
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