Using creative expression to help children articulate grief that exceeds ordinary language, following Mirabai's model of poetry as truth-telling.
Mirabai's poetry gives voice to experiences that cannot be contained in conventional language—her devotion, her yearning, her defiance, her ecstasy. For children in grief, especially those who struggle with verbal expression, creative practices offer pathways to articulate the unspeakable. Through poetry, visual art, music, movement, or theater, a child can externalize internal experiences that feel too large or too painful for regular speech. A child might draw their grief as color and shape, write poetry that mirrors Mirabai's intensity, compose music, or perform movement that embodies their loss. These practices serve multiple functions: they provide emotional release, create witnesses to the child's experience, and transform isolated pain into meaningful expression. Art also allows the child to explore contradictory feelings simultaneously—a single poem or artwork can hold both rage and love, abandonment and gratitude. Mirabai's poetry gave her a voice that transcended the constraints of her era. Creative work gives grieving children a voice that transcends the limits of their current language and understanding.
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