Using creative practices—song, art, poetry, ritual—as vessels for grief processing, following Mirabai's model of turning sorrow into sacred expression.
Mirabai poured her grief into devotional songs that became timeless spiritual texts. For young people, this concept invites grief into creative expression rather than forcing it into verbal therapy alone. A child might write letters to someone deceased, create an altar, compose songs, dance, paint, or develop rituals that honor loss. These practices externalize internal pain, making it manageable and sharable. Unlike suppression, devotional expression acknowledges the sacred dimension of grief—that loss connects us to something larger than ourselves. Young people learn their sorrow has dignity and power. The act of expressing grief creatively also provides containment: the song ends, the painting is finished, the ritual completes, giving grief a form and boundary. This honors Mirabai's legacy of transforming personal anguish into universal spiritual language.
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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