In Mirabai's bhakti, deep grief and longing for the absent divine are not obstacles to spirituality but its most intimate expression, reframing suffering as relationship.
Mirabai's spirituality was built on absence—the longing for Krishna who was not physically present, the ache of separation that never fully resolved. Rather than seek closure, completion, or transcendence of this pain, she dwelled in it as the deepest form of relationship. This reframes grief not as pathology but as intimacy. When you grieve, you are in relationship—with what you have lost, with what you love, with the reality of impermanence itself. The rage underneath often emerges because grief has been pathologized, pressured toward resolution. Mirabai teaches that grief need not be resolved; it can be lived as a form of prayer, a conversation with the divine or with truth itself. This does not mean staying stuck in suffering but rather integrating suffering into your ongoing relationship with what matters most. The concept of grief as divine intimacy suggests that your deepest pain may be pointing toward your deepest love. By examining what you grieve most fiercely, you discover what you cherish most truly. This transforms grief from an obstacle into a teacher and a door.
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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