Using the body—through movement, dance, vocalization, and touch—to process and release grief in communal settings.
Mirabai's devotional practice was intensely embodied; she danced, sang, and swayed in ecstatic expression of love and longing. Her body was not separate from her spiritual truth but its primary vehicle. African mourning traditions deeply honor this embodied knowing: keening, dancing, drumming, and rhythmic movement are not supplements to grief but central to it. Embodied mourning ritual acknowledges that trauma and emotion live in the body and must be released there. Through synchronized movement and sound, mourners process loss kinesthetically, creating catharsis and collective release. The rhythm of drums, the harmony of voices, and the spatial arrangement of bodies in ceremony all ground grief in physical reality. Mirabai teaches us that the body's ecstatic response to love—and loss—is not indulgence but truth-telling, and that communities need these rituals to metabolize collective pain.
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