Creating physical practices—singing, dancing, movement—through which young people can express grief in their bodies, honoring Mirabai's full-bodied devotion.
Mirabai danced in ecstatic devotion, her whole body expressing her spiritual longing. Grief lives in bodies—children feel it as heaviness, tightness, numbness, or explosive energy. Embodied lament rituals give grief physical expression beyond words. These might include: singing or chanting names of loved ones, creating movement sequences that express different grief emotions, dancing to meaningful songs, drumming circles, or ritual actions like lighting candles or placing hands on the earth. Young people who struggle to articulate feelings in language often find profound release through their bodies. A child might pound clay while voicing rage, sway while remembering tenderness, or dance to process the intensity of loss. These rituals also create container and completion—a beginning and end to an expression, providing shape to formless sorrow. Supporting young people means recognizing that grief is not only cognitive but embodied, and offering practices that honor the full spectrum of their physicality.
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