A practice of full-bodied presence with grief and rage, allowing them expression through movement, sound, and sensation rather than containment.
Mirabai danced in states of devotional ecstasy, her body a vehicle for feeling that rational mind could not contain. This concept applies her embodied spirituality to processing rage and grief. Instead of managing emotions through analysis alone, ecstatic witness invites you to feel them somatically: through movement, vocalization, breath, or creative expression. Allow anger to have its volume, its physicality. Mirabai's tradition honors the body as sacred ground where spirit meets flesh. Rage held only in the mind calcifies; rage expressed through the body can move and transform. This might mean dancing anger, singing grief, or allowing the body to shake and cry. The practice is not catharsis for its own sake but conscious witnessing: you are present to your rage without being controlled by it. You are the container and the contents both. This honors the ancient truth that consciousness meets emotion in the body, and the heart—physical and spiritual—needs permission to feel fully.
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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