Facilitate children's grief processing through somatic practices like dance and breath work that honor grief as a full-body experience.
Mirabai's ecstatic dancing expressed what words could not—grief, joy, longing, and devotion moving through her entire being. Children carry grief somatically: in tight chests, heavy limbs, or frantic energy. Movement practices honor this embodied reality. Whether structured dance, free movement to music, running, or even crying—facilitating grief through the body bypasses the mind's defensive patterns. Children might move as their grief feels, or dance their loved one's favorite song, or shake and stomp to release overwhelming emotion. Breath work becomes especially powerful: slow breathing regulates nervous systems flooded with loss, while conscious sobbing or sighing releases held tension. Adults needn't be trained dancers; authentic, witnessed movement matters more than technique. Creating containers where children can move freely without self-consciousness becomes crucial. These practices teach that emotions have physical dimensions requiring physical release. Regular embodied grief work prevents dissociation and builds capacity to process pain gradually. Following Mirabai's model, we learn that the heart and body hold wisdom that the thinking mind cannot access alone.
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