Girl from Bihar performs a dance of sacred solace in Delhi Hospital

New Delhi : At a corner of Army Base Hospital, Delhi Cantt, Shambhavi Sharma, a 17-year-old stood before a hushed circle of six women with a heart full of grace. Their hospital gowns whispered of recovery’s weight, but the ward held its breath. Shambhavi’s portable speaker hummed softly, ready to cradle her dance. “Pain is inevitable, but through dance, we can choose serenity,” she said, her voice a gentle flame of resolve. What unfolded was an hour of Kuchipudi’s divine magic, a haven for weary souls who watched, transfixed.
Shambhavi began with Dashavatara Kuchipudi dance, a sacred saga of Lord Vishnu’s ten avatars, each a celestial gesture to restore the world’s balance. Her mudras painted a holy canvas: Pataka shimmered like Matsya’s fins slicing through primordial seas, Shikhara pulsed with Narasimha’s fierce valor, Ardhachandra sang Krishna’s flute under a starry veil, Kapittha bloomed with Rama’s tender mercy. The women—veterans like Mrs. Suresh, new mothers like Mrs. Saroj, and patients in recovery like Mrs. Taimul—sat in silent awe, their eyes tracing each gesture as if drawn into a temple’s glow. “It was like my village puja,” Mrs. Saroj, 38, murmured, her voice soft with memory. “My heart found peace.” Mrs. Suresh, 62, said, “The dance eased my pain, like a divine touch.” Mrs. Taimul, 45, smiled, “I felt lighter, like my worries melted away.”
This session, part of Nrityamrit’s eight-session series, was a sanctuary of healing. Shambhavi, shaped by nine years under Padmashri Gurus Raja Radha Reddy, poured her soul into the performance, her movements a prayer for the women who watched. They didn’t dance—their bodies, bound by recovery, found solace in observation alone. Shambhavi guided them through the Dashavatara’s narrative, her mudras a language of divinity. Pataka offered calm, its open palm a gesture of serenity. Shikhara summoned strength, a fist of resolve that steadied Mrs. Suresh’s gaze. Ardhachandra whispered hope, its crescent arc a hymn to Krishna’s grace, softening Mrs. Taimul’s clenched hands. “Dance is my offering to those bearing silent struggles,” Shambhavi said, her eyes reflecting the stoic calm of one who knows suffering yet chooses light.
The ward became a temple as stories flowed like quiet offerings. Mrs. Saroj spoke of festival nights, her hands still as if holding a diya’s flame. Mrs. Suresh shared tales of her youth, her voice warm with pride. Mrs. Taimul, voice soft, recalled her daughter’s laughter, her eyes bright with warmth. They didn’t move their bodies, but their hearts swayed with Shambhavi’s mudras, each gesture weaving them closer. The women drew simple shapes on paper—lotuses, stars, cradles—pouring their spirits into lines and curves. Every woman watched the performance, their stillness a shared reverence, their hearts lifted by the dance’s sacred rhythm. An informal survey, gathered with nurses’ aid, showed 83% felt “happier” or “more relaxed,” a gentle wave of peace in the hospital’s heavy air.
Nrityamrit, born from Shambhavi’s belief that every heart is a temple, has lifted 150+ spirits across its series, with 90% finding brighter moods. This session, one of eight, held the women in a sacred embrace. Their stories became hymns, their drawings a canvas of trust. Mrs. Saroj’s lotus sketch glowed with purity, rising from her pain’s quiet depths. Mrs. Suresh’s star sparked with enduring strength, unbroken by her recovery’s trials. Mrs. Taimul’s cradle, drawn with care, held her dreams for her daughter. The ward, once silent, pulsed with unity, as if Dashavatara’s cosmic grace had stirred their souls.
Challenges tested Shambhavi’s spirit. The cramped ward demanded precise choreography, solved by shifting chairs with nurses’ care. The women’s recovery limited their strength, requiring a dance that healed through sight alone, crafted with tender precision. Time pressed against her, but Shambhavi stood ready, her stoic resolve a quiet force. “We cannot choose our sorrows, but dance can teach us peace,” she said, her hands folding into Pataka as if sealing a vow.
The session closed with certificates, small tokens of an hour that felt eternal. The women left lighter, their faces glowing with serenity’s promise. Nrityamrit turned a hospital ward into a temple, where dance was a prayer and stories were light. Shambhavi’s Dashavatara, a sacred thread, wove their hearts together. It continues to prove that even in stillness, dance can heal the soul.