Anuraga is the deepening of love through separation and longing, suggesting that grief and love are not opposites but intimately entangled.
Anuraga describes a love that does not fade with distance or loss, but actually intensifies through the ache of separation. For Mirabai, her love for Krishna was inseparable from her grief at not possessing him in ordinary ways. This concept dissolves the modern assumption that loss diminishes love into memory. Instead, anuraga suggests that grief is love continuing to move, to work, to seek expression when its ordinary channels are blocked. When we lose someone or something, anuraga invites us to ask: how does my love persist? How does it transform? Rather than 'getting over' loss, we might cultivate anuraga—a relationship with what we've lost that grows more nuanced, more textured, more creatively demanding over time. This is the grief that does not end but evolves into song, art, generosity, or changed understanding. Loss becomes the crucible in which love reveals its deeper nature.
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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