Mirabai's practice of pouring grief and love into music and poetry, transforming private anguish into shared, sacred expression.
Mirabai sang her longing, her devotion, her rage, and her ecstasy into songs that moved others to tears and transformation. She didn't contain her grief; she poured it outward. For those in anticipatory grief, suppression deepens the pain. Expression—through words, tears, music, movement, art—gives grief form and passage. You don't have to be a poet or musician; you can write letters the person will never read, speak unsaid words aloud, create rituals that acknowledge both love and impending loss. Mirabai's songs were radical honesty in a world that demanded silence from women. Similarly, your grief-soaked expression honors both what you're losing and what you're feeling. This isn't self-indulgence; it's spiritual alchemical work that transmutes private suffering into meaning. The examined heart sings; it doesn't suffer in silence.
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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