The use of movement, dance, music, and somatic practices to process grief through the body, honoring the deceased and the griever's ongoing embodied life.
Mirabai danced. Her bhakti was not mere philosophy but physical ecstasy—spinning, swaying, her body a language for what words could not hold. Grief rituals accomplish something essential when they include embodied practice: they prevent grief from calcifying in the psyche as abstract trauma. When people dance at New Orleans funerals, when they sway during Jewish mourning prayers, when they move in African funeral processions, they enact a paradox—honoring death through life-affirming movement. Embodied grieving says: this body lives; the beloved lived; we continue in flesh. Mirabai's dancing modeled this: she did not retreat from her body in grief but intensified her presence through it. Research in somatic psychology confirms that cultures integrating movement into grief rituals show better recovery and lower rates of traumatic grief. The examined heart finds its truest expression not only in words but in the body's honest testimony.
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