Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Grief as the Doorway to Compassion

Mirabai's anguished separation from Krishna teaches that unresolved grief hardens the heart, while fully grieved loss opens compassion for all beings experiencing loss and longing.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's poetry is soaked in the pain of separation from her beloved, yet she does not turn away from this grief. In Buddhist practice, compassion (karuna) requires the capacity to feel others' suffering; many practitioners intellectualize this while defending against their own pain. Mirabai demonstrates that authentic compassion emerges only when we have fully felt our own grief. Her examined heart did not suppress the ache of Krishna's absence but poured it into verse, ceremony, and connection with other devotees also bereft. This concept suggests that in relationships, unprocessed grief creates walls—we become either cold or clingy, unable to meet our partners' vulnerability with genuine warmth. When we allow ourselves to grieve losses, separations, and the inevitable impermanence of even the closest bonds, that grief becomes a bridge to others' sorrow. Compassion then flows naturally, not as technique but as recognition: we all ache; we all long; we all must learn to love what cannot be possessed.

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