Anuraga (spontaneous, deepening attachment) reveals that grief can perpetuate itself by becoming a form of continued relationship with the lost person or what was lost.
Anuraga in bhakti means spontaneous, deepening love—an attachment that grows and becomes more intimate over time without conscious effort. Mirabai's anuraga for Krishna only intensified across her lifetime; separation didn't diminish her bond but deepened it. This concept illuminates a hidden mechanism in prolonged grief: we may unconsciously maintain grief because it is our ongoing relationship with the deceased or lost state. As long as we grieve actively, we are still in connection. This isn't pathological; it's human. However, anuraga also teaches that deepening doesn't require suffering. Attachment can mature into tenderness rather than ache. The examined heart asks: am I maintaining grief as my primary relationship with this person or loss? Has the grief itself become the attachment I'm protecting? Mirabai shows that anuraga can evolve from longing and pain into presence and blessing. Grief's duration often reflects how much we're still willing to tend the relationship through mourning—a choice worth examining consciously rather than extending unconsciously.
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