Mirabai's devotional singing (sang) adapted as a somatic, expressive practice for processing anniversary grief through voice and music.
Mirabai's bhakti path centered on sang—devotional songs that poured out longing, ecstasy, and loneliness. Her verses expressed unfiltered emotion, making her inner world audible. For those facing grief anniversaries, sang offers a somatic pathway: using voice, music, and vocalization to move grief through the body rather than keeping it locked inside. This might mean singing laments, playing an instrument, humming, or even keening—ancient forms of vocal mourning found across cultures. Mirabai showed that sacred emotion doesn't require polished expression; it requires authenticity. On anniversary dates, when words fail and the heart feels too full, sang invites us to vocalize grief. The vibration of sound moving through the chest, throat, and breath becomes a container for what cannot be spoken. This practice honors both the depth of loss and the life force still moving through us, transforming silence into resonance.
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