The shared yearning a community feels after loss becomes a unifying spiritual practice that connects us across isolation and difference.
Mirabai's longing for Krishna—her viraha or separation-love—was not weakness but the very foundation of her devotional practice. That ache, that yearning, kept her connected to the divine. In collective grief, shared longing serves a similar function. When a community grieves together, they experience collective viraha—a unified yearning that transcends individual isolation. A celebrity's death, a disaster, a tragedy creates a moment when strangers recognize their shared capacity to long for beauty, justice, connection, or the person now gone. This collective longing becomes an anchor. It reminds us that we are not atomized individuals but participants in human community. The ache we share with thousands or millions becomes proof of our interdependence. Rather than pathologizing this longing as unhealthy attachment, Mirabai's tradition honors it as the heart's true language. Collective grief, held as sacred longing, deepens spiritual awareness and reveals the bonds that actually sustain us.
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