Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Music of Anger: Sound as Release

Using music, chant, and rhythm as Mirabai did to give voice to rage and grief, allowing emotional intensity to move through the body.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai danced and sang her devotion, and her music was not always gentle—it was fierce, demanding, sometimes transgressive. Music in her tradition serves as a container for emotional intensity that cannot be contained by words alone. Anger and grief carry vibrational energy that becomes trapped in the body when unexpressed; music releases this energy, allowing it to move through and out. This concept examines how chanting, singing, and rhythmic movement can express what silence suppresses. When rage rises, sound becomes a vehicle for honoring its power without destructive action. The examined heart practice pairs with musical expression: we see the pain, then we voice it. This prevents rage from calcifying into bitterness or turning inward as depression. Mirabai's music was her testimony, her protest, and her prayer—all at once. In adopting this practice, we give our grief and anger a sacred form and a path toward transformation.

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