Using embodied practices—dance, song, movement—to know and express grief where words fail.
Mirabai danced. Her devotion was not intellectual but somatic: the body in ecstasy, the throat singing longing, the limbs moving prayer. Grief too lives in the body before language: tightness in the chest, heaviness in the limbs, the catch in the throat. Many find that words for loss are inadequate. The body knows differently. This concept invites us to trust embodied expression: dance the grief, sing it, move it through ritual. Creative practices rooted in the body—not as escape but as genuine knowing—access dimensions of loss that thinking alone cannot reach. Trauma and grief are stored somatically; they release somatically too. Mirabai's example shows that ecstatic bodily devotion is spiritually legitimate and creatively powerful. For those grieving, movement becomes meditation, sound becomes prayer, physical expression becomes both witness and transmutation of what the heart carries.
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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