Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Longing as Connection Across Distance

Mirabai's songs crossed centuries and realms to reach Krishna; this framework redefines anticipatory grief's longing as a form of connection that transcends physical presence.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai had no guarantee Krishna would answer her calls, yet she sang as if across a veil, maintaining intimacy with the unreachable. Her longing was itself a bridge. In anticipatory grief, longing often feels like a symptom of dysfunction—something to overcome. But this concept reframes it: the ache you feel reaching toward someone is actually a form of connection. When you think of them, worry about how they'll be, imagine their suffering or your own without them, you're in relationship with them across time and imagination. This isn't denial or magical thinking; it's recognizing that love operates through presence, memory, imagination, and longing simultaneously. Mirabai's tradition teaches that the yearning itself is sacred—it's how we remain devoted across impossible distances. For anticipatory grief, this means: your longing proves your love is real and alive. Rather than viewing it as a symptom to cure, honor it as your current way of loving. Write to them, speak to them, hold them in your awareness. The longing is the connection. When they're gone, these practiced pathways of reaching across distance will help you continue the relationship in new form.

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