The emotional essence of love that paradoxically deepens when its object is lost, transforming collective grief into a shared spiritual practice.
Prema rasa, the devotional flavor of pure love, teaches that grief is not the opposite of love but its truest expression. Mirabai's songs grieved Krishna's absence while celebrating his eternal presence—a paradox that reframes collective mourning. When we grieve public figures or shared tragedies, we're experiencing prema rasa: the ache of loving something beyond our control. This Bhakti insight dissolves the boundary between personal and collective sorrow, suggesting that mourning together isn't passive despair but an active devotion to what we've lost. By recognizing grief as love's deepest form, we honor the person or moment we're mourning with the intensity Mirabai brought to her own longing. This transforms public grief from isolated pain into a sacred communion.
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.