Public singing and artistic expression as a communal container for anticipatory grief and collective transformation.
Mirabai's songs were sung in public spaces—temples, streets, homes—creating a shared emotional field. Sang keertan (group singing of sacred names) was not private devotion but collective witnessing. The voice joining other voices creates a body that can hold grief that no individual can carry alone. For anticipatory grief, this principle suggests that art, music, poetry, and public witness become essential—not as entertainment or distraction but as containers for collective emotion. When we sing together, grieve together, create together, we build resilience through connection. A community that can openly lament together, that creates space for honest artistic expression about change and loss, develops the emotional coherence to respond wisely. Mirabai's keertan model shows that public expression of the heart's truth becomes an act of civilization-building in itself.
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