Mirabai's ecstatic dance and devotional song demonstrate how expressing grief through the body—not just words—helps young people integrate loss.
Mirabai didn't merely think about her devotion; she danced it, sang it, moved through the world expressing her inner reality. This embodied spirituality recognizes that grief lives in the body—in the chest, the throat, the gut—and that intellectual or verbal processing alone is incomplete. Young people can be encouraged to express grief through movement: dancing, running, creating art, playing music, or even physically releasing tension. Singing, whether alone or in groups, accesses emotional truth that words sometimes cannot reach. Rhythm and music bypass cognitive defenses and touch the emotional core directly. For grieving children, this embodied expression prevents the dissociation or numbness that can result from purely intellectual coping. The body becomes a vessel for grief, and through honoring the body's need for expression, young people develop wholeness and integration rather than compartmentalization of their pain.
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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