Developing an expressive vocabulary specific to grief—naming the nuances of loss in language raw enough to be true.
Mirabai's poetry invented language for experiences that conventional speech could not contain: the ecstatic pain of divine longing, the erotic spiritual love, the contradiction of being abandoned and held simultaneously. She had to break syntax, mix registers, speak impossible things. Grief demands similar linguistic invention. The flattened language of 'I'm doing okay' or 'time heals' cannot hold what grief actually is. The creative work becomes linguistic: finding or forging the words, metaphors, and structures that can contain your specific loss. What does your grief sound like? What does it look like? What color is it, what texture? Artists working through grief often report that the search for adequate language or form is itself healing—it requires sustained attention, honesty, and courage. The examined heart needs a language worthy of it. This practice involves resisting cliché and settling for nothing less than truth, even when that truth is strange, contradictory, or inarticulate.
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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