A somatic practice treating the celibate body as a channel for divine expression rather than a problem to manage or deny.
Mirabai danced, sang, and inhabited her body fully in service of her love. Bhakti celebrates embodied devotion—music, movement, sensory experience—as pathways to the divine. This directly challenges ascetic celibacy that treats the body as an enemy or mere flesh to be conquered. For modern practitioners of celibacy without sex, this concept reorients the relationship to embodiment. The examined heart asks: How can my body serve love and expression rather than become a site of struggle? This might include voice work, dance, martial arts, yoga, or any practice that allows the body to channel vitality and presence. The body remains alive, sensitive, responsive—not desexualized or shut down, but redirected. A celibate person practicing this learns to inhabit their skin fully, to breathe deeply, to move with purpose. Sexual energy need not be acted upon through partnered sex to remain vital; it can become the generative force behind creative work, teaching, healing, or spiritual practice. The body sings what the heart holds.
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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