Sacred practice that honors the body as vehicle for love without sexual expression, through dance, music, and sensory engagement.
Mirabai danced in temples, sang with wild abandon, and refused to separate her body from her spiritual devotion. Devotional embodiment rejects the false binary of body versus spirit, reclaiming the senses as pathways to the divine. For celibate practitioners, this means engaging fully with music, movement, taste, fragrance, and touch in non-sexual ways. Dance becomes prayer. Singing becomes union. Food becomes sacrament. The body remains alive and sensitive rather than deadened by denial. This practice prevents celibacy from becoming a disembodied asceticism that fragments the self. Instead, practitioners develop heightened sensory awareness and aesthetic sensitivity—the examined heart experiencing beauty in all its forms. Mirabai's public dancing scandalized her society but modeled a celibacy that was fully embodied, joyous, and alive rather than withdrawn and diminished. Devotional embodiment keeps the whole person engaged in spiritual practice.
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