The practice of expressing rage and sorrow through music and sound, allowing emotion to be held and transformed by vibration.
Nada yoga—the yoga of sound—is central to Mirabai's legacy. Her songs were not pretty performances but raw transmissions of grief, longing, and spiritual hunger. Sound has unique power to metabolize emotion: when grief moves through the voice, the body, the space around us, it is witnessed and diffused rather than trapped in the chest. Mirabai's devotional songs often carried edges of anger—accusation, complaint, bold questioning of Krishna. By giving her rage a voice, a melody, a rhythm, she prevented it from becoming disease or despair. Modern applications include chanting, singing, toning, or even simple vocalization—making sound with your grief. The vibration moves emotion through the nervous system, prevents dissociation, and creates a bridge between private pain and transpersonal expression. Nada yoga teaches that there is no emotion too raw or angry to be held by sound.
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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