Sangit—sacred music and song—offers a somatic pathway for processing grief, allowing emotion to move through the body and transform into creative expression.
Mirabai was first and foremost a singer; her devotional songs were not intellectual exercises but embodied prayers that moved feeling through voice and body. Sangit in the bhakti tradition is not decorative but essential—a technology for processing the inexpressible. Sound itself becomes a container for grief too large for words. When we sing, hum, or vocalize our loss, we engage a pre-verbal wisdom that bypasses intellectual defenses. The vibration moves through us, releasing held emotion and creating space for new understanding. For those working with grief and creativity, sangit offers a framework for treating music-making not as performance but as somatic healing. Whether through traditional forms or personal expression, singing grief allows it to complete its natural cycle—to be felt, expressed, and integrated rather than chronically stored in the body.
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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