Honoring grief as embodied experience—tears, physical ache, sensations—rather than treating it as a problem to be managed mentally.
Mirabai danced her devotion. Her body was not separate from her spiritual practice but integral to it—through movement, music, and somatic expression, she channeled her longing for the divine. Grief anniversaries often trigger bodily responses: tightness in the chest, heaviness in the limbs, a lump in the throat, exhaustion, restlessness. Rather than suppressing these sensations or treating them as symptoms to medicate away, Mirabai's tradition invites you to honor your body as a sacred vessel through which grief moves. Cry if tears come. Move your body—walk, sway, dance, sit. Breathe consciously. Feel the weight of your sadness without judgment. Your body holds the memory of your relationship; it knows this loss intimately. On triggering dates, you might be more tender with yourself physically: rest, touch, nourishment, gentle movement. Your body grieves not as a malfunction but as a faithful companion to your heart, carrying the weight of love that remains.
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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