Physical and sensory practices—movement, music, touch—that help children process grief through their bodies rather than only their minds.
Mirabai danced her devotion; she didn't merely think about it. Embodied practices recognize that grief lives in the body—in the chest, the throat, the belly—and that intellectual understanding alone cannot heal it. For children, embodied mourning might include: dancing or moving to music, drumming or singing, creating art with paint or clay, walking in nature, or sitting in comfortable silence. These practices bypass the thinking mind and access deeper processing. A child who cannot articulate their pain might paint it, move it, or sing it. The body knows how to grieve when given permission and space. These practices also interrupt the numbing that often accompanies trauma and grief, reconnecting young people with sensation and presence. Whether through yoga, expressive arts, nature immersion, or ritual, embodied practices help children integrate loss through their whole being rather than becoming dissociated or purely cerebral.
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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