Mirabai's embodied devotion—her dancing, singing, ecstatic expressions—honors how grief anniversaries trigger the body, and teaches us to trust bodily knowing.
Mirabai's bhakti was never purely intellectual; it moved through her body—in ecstatic dance, in song that made her voice break, in the physical surrender of devotion. Her tradition recognizes that the body holds its own wisdom and memory. Grief anniversaries often trigger us somatically before our minds consciously register the date: a tightness in the chest, insomnia, unexpected tears, restless energy, or numbness. Rather than treating these bodily responses as symptoms to suppress, Mirabai's practice invites us to listen. What is your body trying to tell you on this anniversary? Where does the grief live physically? Mirabai would suggest moving with it—dancing, chanting, walking, allowing the body to express what words cannot. On triggering dates, honoring the body's wisdom means creating space for somatic grief work: movement, sound, touch, presence with sensation. The body is not a problem to manage; it is a sacred teacher speaking the language of the beloved.
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