Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Kirtana—Naming Grief in Community Song

The collective singing of names, stories, and emotions; grief and anger become shared rather than isolated experiences.

Mira
Why It Matters

Kirtana, or devotional singing in community, creates a container where personal pain becomes universal and shared. Mirabai's songs circulated among devotees, each person recognizing their own grief and longing in her words. This practice suggests that the rage underneath often intensifies in isolation; when we sing, speak, or share our anger and grief with others who witness and validate it, transformation becomes possible. Kirtana is not about performing positivity or spirituality for others; it is about voicing truth in a held space. For modern practitioners, this concept translates to the power of community, shared story, creative expression, and being heard. The examined heart seeks not to be fixed but to be witnessed. When grief and anger are named aloud in the presence of others—in song, poetry, ritual, or conversation—they lose their power to isolate and dominate consciousness. Shared expression creates the possibility of integration and meaning-making.

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