Use call-and-response singing (kirtana) to collectively voice and metabolize anticipatory grief without isolation.
Mirabai used song—kirtana—as her primary practice. Song is collective, embodied, and creates resonance between bodies and hearts. Anticipatory grief often isolates; we fear our anxiety is excessive or unwelcome. Kirtana offers a container: singing our grief together, in rhythm, transforms individual despair into shared witness. This might mean literal devotional singing or metaphorically: creating spaces where anticipatory grief is voiced, heard, and held collectively rather than privatized as mental illness. Kirtana acknowledges that civilization's potential loss is not your personal failure; it is a shared rupture deserving shared voice. The rhythm, repetition, and communal nature of kirtana also regulate the nervous system, moving grief from cognitive spiral into embodied presence. Singing grief into collective memory preserves what is being lost and transforms solitary mourning into relational resilience.
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