Honoring intense emotional expression—dancing, singing, weeping—as sacred practice rather than loss of control during collective grief.
Mirabai danced, sang, and wept publicly with unrestrained devotion, transforming the body into instrument of spiritual expression. In modern collective grief, we often pathologize emotional intensity, encouraging people to 'stay composed' or 'move on.' Mirabai's model reclaims ecstatic sorrow as spiritual legitimacy. The tears shed for lost public figures, the songs composed, the gatherings where strangers weep together—these are not breakdowns but breakthroughs into genuine feeling. Ecstatic expression bypasses the mind's defenses and touches the heart's truth. When collective tragedy strikes, permission for full emotional expression—ritual, art, public gathering—allows grief to flow rather than calcify. This isn't wallowing but active transformation of sorrow into love. Mirabai teaches that the heart's intensity, even in pain, is evidence of our capacity for love and our refusal to remain numb in an unjust or fragile world.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.