Bhakti does not shy from suffering in love; Mirabai's anguished poetry shows that grief and longing are not signs of failed love but marks of its authenticity and depth.
Western culture often frames conflict and heartbreak as evidence that love was mistaken or misplaced. Mirabai inverts this: the capacity to grieve, to yearn, to suffer for love proves that love is real. Her passionate complaints and laments to Krishna are not signs of a broken heart but of a heart fully alive and devoted. In conflict, this bhakti perspective shifts the narrative: pain is not punishment but witness to love's power. When lovers fight, they grieve the gap between their actual relationship and the one they imagined. Rather than suppressing or rushing past this grief, bhakti encourages turning it into song, prayer, poetry—channels for authentic expression. Mirabai's tears were not shameful but sacred. This revaluation allows couples to grieve together: to name what has been lost, what remains possible, and what the conflict itself reveals about their capacity to love. Grief, witnessed and expressed, can become the foundation of deeper intimacy than the illusion of effortless union.
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