Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Grief Rituals and Devotional Practices

Structured rituals—music, prayer, art, ceremony—that allow children to channel grief into meaningful practice, honoring Mirabai's use of song and devotion as spiritual work.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai used music, dance, and poetry as vehicles for her devotion. Rituals harness grief's intensity and transform it into something generative. For children, grief rituals might include: singing or playing music together, creating art dedicated to the deceased, lighting candles on anniversaries, planting something that grows, writing letters to the person who died. These practices create structure around overwhelming emotion and offer repeated containers for processing loss. Rituals signal that grief is important, worthy of ceremony, not something to hide. They can be secular or spiritual, individual or communal. Through ritual, children externalize internal pain, involve their bodies and senses, and create meaningful moments that honor their loved one. Especially in cultures with strong ritual traditions, grief rituals provide coherence and spiritual meaning, helping young people feel held by something larger than their individual loss.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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