Using the capacity to grieve—to fully feel loss, longing, and absence—as an opening to deeper communion with the divine.
Mirabai grieved her separation from Krishna with the full force of her being, transforming sorrow into song and presence. In celibacy without sex, grief is inevitable: the grief of unfulfilled romantic partnership, children not born, physical embrace not given. Rather than medicating or denying this grief, this framework invites full experience of it as sacred. Grief cracks open the defended heart and reveals its capacity for tenderness, vulnerability, and connection. When grieved fully and honestly, longing becomes a bridge to the divine rather than a wound that festers. This is not masochism but alchemy: the transformation of pain into presence, of absence into profound attunement. For the celibate practitioner, grieving what is not—the partner, the child, the ordinary intimacy—paradoxically opens access to what is: the immediate, eternal presence of the beloved in all things. Grief becomes proof of the heart's capacity to love without condition or demand.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.