Mirabai's devotional ecstasy as a practice for residing fully in grief's physical and emotional reality rather than intellectualizing it away.
Mirabai's bhakti was radically embodied: dancing, singing, weeping, trembling in the presence of her beloved. She did not meditate on love abstractly; she inhabited it somatically. Anticipatory grief for civilization demands equal embodiment. We must feel it in the body—the tightness in the chest, the heaviness in the limbs, the tears—rather than processing it only as intellectual concern. Mirabai teaches that sacred ecstasy and sacred sorrow are not opposites but expressions of the same depth of presence. When we allow grief to move through our bodies, we become conduits for a collective mourning that can transform into wisdom and compassion. This embodied approach prevents anticipatory grief from becoming dissociated anxiety and roots it instead in our capacity to feel, witness, and remain alive to what is happening.
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