Rituals accomplish embodied healing by treating the griever's body—through gesture, fasting, marking, and movement—as central to the work.
Mirabai danced in ecstatic devotion; her body was not separate from her spiritual practice but its primary instrument. Applied to grief rituals, this principle reveals why practices like sitting, standing, kneeling, touching, and moving matter profoundly. Jewish tradition requires tearing clothes; Hindu cremation involves fire; Irish keening uses the voice intensively. These are not aesthetic choices but somatic wisdom: grief lives in the body, and rituals accomplish their work by meeting grief there. Contemporary Western culture often treats the body as obstacle in mourning—containing emotion, maintaining composure. But rituals that honor the body's expression accomplish integration: the tears that flow, the hands that tremble, the chest that heaves, the knees that buckle. Fasting, wearing specific colors, ritual bathing, and prescribed postures all accomplish psychological and spiritual work by engaging the soma. Mirabai's dancing reminds us that the body is not the problem in grief but its rightful teacher.
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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