The understanding that grief and separation are not final states but part of eternal cycles, allowing rage to release its grip through recognition of impermanence.
Nitya lila—eternal play—extends lila across time, suggesting that all experiences, including separation and loss, are eternally recurring. In Hindu cosmology, the universe itself cycles through creation and dissolution. This perspective radically recontextualizes grief: your particular loss, while unique and real, participates in larger patterns. The rage underneath grief often rigidifies around the belief that things should be different than they are, that this loss is final and absolute. Nitya lila gently suggests: this loss is real, and it is also part of a pattern larger than your individual story. For Mirabai, separation from Krishna was devastating, yet she knew this separation and reunion were part of eternal cycles. This understanding didn't erase pain but made it less isolating and absolutizing. For the examined heart, recognizing impermanence and cyclicality can soften rigidity. The rage that says 'This should never have happened' might gradually become 'This happened, and I am learning to hold this, and even this will change.' This is not resignation; it's the kind of acceptance that allows movement and healing rather than frozen anger.
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