Mirabai transmuted her grief into sacred songs; giving grieving children tools to express sorrow through creative practice transforms pain into meaning-making.
Mirabai's poetry is her grief work—through song, she transforms personal anguish into universal spiritual expression. This alchemical process offers a model for supporting grieving children: create space and permission for them to express sorrow through whatever medium resonates: writing, visual art, music, movement, or storytelling. The act of crafting something from pain serves multiple functions. It honors the grief as real and significant. It externalizes internal chaos, making it visible and therefore less overwhelming. It creates something that can be shared, moving grief from isolated suffering into connection. For children, this might mean: songwriting circles, grief journals decorated with images, dance that expresses sadness, or stories about the person who died told and retold until they become bearable. Unlike suppression, which requires constant energy, creative expression allows grief to flow through and gradually settle. The child's creative work becomes both testimony to their love and proof of their resilience.
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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