Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Lament as Sacred Expression

Mirabai's practice of expressing anguish and longing through poetry and song, validating lament as a dignified, sacred form of grief processing for young people.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai did not hide her longing and anguish—she voiced them through bhajans, ecstatic poetry, and song that became spiritual practice. This concept reframes lament as sacred rather than shameful, offering children a model for expressing grief through creative outlets. Rather than encouraging suppression or "positive thinking," this approach invites young people to externalize their pain through writing, art, music, dance, or ritual. When a child laments—cries out, questions why, expresses anger—they are participating in an ancient, noble tradition of making meaning through honest expression. Mirabai's laments were not private suffering; they were public, embodied, and transformative. For grieving children, this framework validates the full spectrum of grief responses: rage, confusion, longing, despair. By creating a container for lament—whether through journaling, conversation, or artistic practice—we honor the child's experience and help them move toward integration rather than imprisonment of their pain.

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