Mirabai's cosmology of grief as the soul's response to felt separation from the beloved divine.
In Mirabai's bhakti vision, grief and rage arise from separation—the soul's anguish at distance from Krishna, the ultimate beloved. This concept reframes depression and existential rage as potentially spiritual symptoms: signs that something essential is missing. The dark night isn't failure; it's the soul's honest response to absence. Mirabai's poetry dwells in this space, refusing false comfort. For modern seekers, "separation" can mean estrangement from purpose, from community, from authentic self, from the sacred. The dark night asks us to sit with the rage of incompleteness rather than numb it. This practice honors grief as a form of truth-telling. It suggests that beneath surface anger may be a legitimate ache—for belonging, for meaning, for reunion with what makes life feel whole. The examined response asks: What reunion does my rage long for?
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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