Using movement, dance, song, and physical expression to process grief and honor what was lost, drawing from Mirabai's practice of dancing as devotional act and creative release.
Mirabai danced. She did not merely think about her devotion or write it down—she moved her body in ecstatic devotional practice, often in public, in ways her society deemed improper. This embodied devotion offers a crucial model for grief work. While intellectual analysis of loss has its place, the body holds and carries what words cannot fully access. Dance, music, ritual movement, and physical making—pottery, painting, gardening—all offer paths for grief to move through and transform. When we engage our bodies in creative practice, we bypass some of the mind's defenses and touch the raw material of feeling. Mirabai's devotional dance was both healing and transgressive; it moved her toward freedom while expressing her pain. For grieving creators, embodied practice—whether through your chosen art form or through ritual movement—offers a way to honor loss with your whole self, not just your thinking mind.
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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