Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ecstatic Expression and Embodied Grief

Mirabai's use of dance, song, and bodily abandon in devotion as a model for cultures where grief finds voice through ecstatic movement and sound.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai danced in public, sang with abandon, and allowed her body to become an instrument of her devotion—a radical act in her context. This ecstatic embodiment offers crucial insight for grief rituals: cultures accomplish profound mourning work when they permit the body to move, cry, keen, dance, and vocalize without constraint. The keening traditions of Ireland, the wailing of Middle Eastern mourning, the dancing of New Orleans jazz funerals—these accomplish what silent, interior grief cannot. They discharge emotion through the body, they create audible and visible community witness, they permit the dissolution of normal social boundaries. Mirabai's example suggests that grief rituals work most powerfully when they make space for ecstatic expression: the body shaking with sobs, the voice lifted in song, the feet moving to rhythm. Modern Western culture often pathologizes this expression, but cross-cultural grief rituals demonstrate its necessity. The body knows how to grieve; rituals accomplish healing when they get out of the body's way and amplify its ancient wisdom.

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