Recognition that grief anniversaries trigger physical and somatic memories, and that honoring the body's knowing is a form of wisdom.
Mirabai's poetry speaks viscerally of the body's experience of longing—the chest's tightness, the belly's ache, the limbs' weakness. She did not separate spiritual devotion from bodily reality but understood them as unified. On anniversary dates, the body remembers: a tightness arises, tears flow, sleep disrupts, appetite vanishes. Rather than suppressing these somatic responses as inconvenient or shameful, the examined heart honors them as the body's own wisdom. The body knew the beloved; the body experiences the loss authentically. Practices like gentle movement, touch, breath work, or simply allowing tears without intellectualizing them acknowledge that grief lives in flesh and bone. When a triggering date arrives, the body may react before the mind catches up—this is not weakness but integrity. By creating space for embodied remembrance—perhaps through ritual, dance, or simply tender self-care—we respect that the heart grieves not only in consciousness but in sinew and blood.
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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