Recognizing that grief lives in the body—tears, stillness, restlessness—and that shared bodily presence amplifies and validates collective mourning.
Mirabai's devotion was embodied: she danced, she wept, she fasted, her body became the text of her longing. The bhakti tradition understood that the divine is not abstract but felt in flesh and blood. In collective mourning, the body becomes a witness. We gather and stand together in silence—this shared bodily presence matters. Tears are not a sign of weakness but of truth. The paralysis that grief brings, the heaviness that makes simple tasks impossible—these are not pathologies but spiritual states. When thousands gather to mourn, the collective body creates a field of sorrow that individual grief could not contain alone. We feel held by the presence of others who are also breaking. Mirabai teaches that the body is not separate from the heart—it is how the heart speaks. To mourn collectively is to honor the body's wisdom, to let sorrow move through muscle and bone, to be witnessed in our most vulnerable physical states.
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