Mirabai's uninhibited dancing and singing offer a somatic model for grief expression that bypasses the mind's restrictions and reconnects the grieving body to aliveness.
Depression often manifests as a profound dissociation from the body—numbness, heaviness, disconnection. Mirabai's practice of ecstatic abandon—dancing until exhaustion, singing until the voice breaks—models a radically different relationship to embodied emotion. She did not process grief cognitively or quietly; she moved it through the body. Contemporary grief research increasingly supports this: somatic practices, movement, and expressive embodiment are crucial components of healthy mourning. Mirabai's example suggests that the body itself holds wisdom about grief and can move us through it when the mind alone cannot. The tears of ecstatic devotion, the swaying of the body in longing, the voice crying out in sorrow—these are not indulgent but therapeutic. When we are depressed, we are often locked in our heads, trapped in rumination. By following Mirabai's model of ecstatic abandon—whether through dance, art, music, or even vigorous walking—we can begin to redistribute grief through the whole body and reconnect to its aliveness, its capacity to feel, move, and transform.
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