Mirabai's explicit, visceral poetry—singing of her body's longing—teaches that anticipatory grief held in the body becomes wisdom rather than pathology.
Mirabai did not spiritualize away her body or deny her feelings. Her poetry is wildly physical: the ache in her chest, the restlessness in her limbs, the tears that flow unbidden. She treated the body's responses not as obstacles to transcendence but as testimony to love's reality. Contemporary anticipatory grief often manifests somatically—tightness in the throat, heaviness in the chest, insomnia, appetite loss—experiences often pathologized as depression or anxiety. Mirabai's example suggests another reading: the body knows what the mind has not yet accepted, and it is speaking truth. Rather than numbing or suppressing these sensations, we can listen to them as the body's testimony to love. Breathing consciously into the ache, moving with the restlessness, crying when tears arise—these become practices of honoring both the person we love and our own capacity to feel deeply. The body becomes a sacred text we learn to read.
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