Mirabai sang her way to liberation; singing, chanting, or voicing on grief anniversaries mobilizes the healing power of sound and sacred expression.
Mirabai left us hundreds of songs, and song was her primary spiritual practice. Song does what ordinary language cannot—it moves through the body, bypasses the rational mind, and opens channels of emotion and insight. On grief anniversaries, singing offers a unique gift. You need not have a beautiful voice or know traditional songs; the act of voicing itself is the practice. You might sing the beloved's name, create a spontaneous song of lament or celebration, chant a mantra, or learn devotional songs in Mirabai's tradition. Sound moves what silence holds frozen. The vibration of your own voice creates resonance within your body and nervous system. On triggering dates, when words feel inadequate and tears seem insufficient, singing allows grief to be expressed, metabolized, and transformed. You might sing alone or with others, loudly or softly. The point is not performance but process—allowing your own voice to become a vessel for love, loss, longing, and the sacred complexity of the human heart.
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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