Mirabai's ecstatic dancing as spiritual practice models how children can process grief through the body, dance, and kinesthetic expression beyond words.
Mirabai danced into states of transcendent union, her body a conduit for devotional experience. This concept recognizes that children's grief lives in their bodies—tight chests, heavy limbs, restless energy—and that cognitive or verbal processing alone is incomplete. Embodied grief work draws from Mirabai's dancing tradition to offer children somatic tools: movement improvisation, sacred dance, rhythm work, or simple body-based practices that allow grief to move through rather than lodge within. Children often cannot articulate their pain verbally; their bodies know it first. By creating space for grief to express through movement, whether gentle or vigorous, children access their own healing wisdom. This might involve dancing to music that matches their emotional state, creating movements that represent their feelings, or group rituals with drumming and movement. Mirabai's ecstatic dancing was public and uninhibited—she did not hide her devotion. For grieving children, permission to move, sway, rock, or express through the body without judgment or interpretation creates an alternative pathway to healing that honors the somatic reality of loss.
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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