Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Embodied Grief Practice

Using the body—through movement, song, breath, ritual—to process and integrate anticipatory grief rather than only thinking about it.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's bhakti was fundamentally embodied: she danced, sang, and moved her grief and love through her physical form. Contemporary approaches to anticipatory grief often remain intellectual, trapped in thought loops. This concept retrieves the body as a primary vehicle for processing anticipatory sorrow. Embodied grief practice might include: dancing to music that moves you, singing or keening, walking in nature with full attention, creating visual art, practicing rituals that honor loss, or rhythmic breathing that allows stuck emotion to flow. The body knows and processes what the mind cannot contain. When we grieve only mentally, we become stuck in analysis. When we grieve embodied—giving the emotion a channel through movement and sound—we allow it to move through us and transform. Mirabai danced her devotion and her grief into the world. Her example suggests that our anticipatory grief, expressed through the body, becomes not a private burden but a shared offering that honors what we love.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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