Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Music and Embodied Grief

Using music and song as primary language for expressing grief that words cannot reach, honoring Mirabai's use of poetry and singing as spiritual practice.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's devotion poured through music and poetry—languages that bypass rational mind to speak from the heart directly. For grieving children, music offers access to emotions too large or complex for words. A child might sing a lullaby to remember a parent, create a drumming pattern that expresses rage, or listen to a song that mirrors their specific loss. Music's rhythm, melody, and vibration engage the body in ways talk therapy alone cannot. Embodied grief practices—singing, dancing, playing instruments—help children who feel stuck in their heads come back into their bodies where grief actually lives. Mirabai's example shows that song is not escape from grief but its most honest expression. For children who cannot articulate their loss, a simple melody might say everything. Creating space for musical expression—whether professional or amateur—honors that some truths can only be sung.

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