Mirabai's devotional songs were often songs of longing and loss; creating your own lament for a lost identity transforms private pain into sacred expression.
Mirabai composed hundreds of songs—many of them expressions of grief, longing, and spiritual ache. She did not hide her sorrow; she made it public through verse, music, and dance. These were not confessional therapy sessions but sacred utterances, offerings, prayers. For someone grieving a lost identity, the practice of creating lament—whether through writing, music, movement, or speech—transforms private pain into something that can be witnessed and held. Lament is not complaint; it's testimony. When you sing, write, or speak your grief for who you were, you're making a claim that this loss is real and worthy of expression. You're refusing the cultural pressure to suppress mourning or move quickly to acceptance. Mirabai's songs did not resolve her suffering, but they gave it shape and meaning. Creating your own lament—a poem, a journal entry, a song—acknowledges that your lost identity deserves to be grieved openly, that your pain is not shameful, and that expressing it connects you to the long human tradition of lament.
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