Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Sacred Longing and Separation

The pain of distance from the beloved becomes a doorway to understanding impermanence and practicing mudita.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's central experience was separation—Krishna was not physically present, yet her longing kept her spiritually alive. This longing is not pathology but sacred fire. Buddhist practice embraces impermanence (anicca), which means all beloveds are ultimately inaccessible—we cannot permanently possess another being. This might sound bleak, but Mirabai shows it is liberating. When we accept that all meetings must end, we can be fully present in meetings. When we acknowledge the fundamental aloneness of each being, we practice genuine respect and mudita—joy in others' freedom. The Brahmaviharas mature precisely in the soil of separation; we learn to love what we cannot control or keep. Mirabai's longing for Krishna mirrors our relationship with all beings: we can meet them, grow with them, but never merge with them or make them ours. This recognition, rather than diminishing love, deepens it into something both tender and boundless.

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Love & Relationships
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