The recognition that deep romantic attachment inevitably contains loss, separation, and mourning—and that this grief, when held consciously, deepens both devotion and freedom.
Mirabai's love for Krishna was inseparable from her anguish at his absence. This is not neurotic separation anxiety; it is the grief inherent in loving something beyond your control. In contemporary attachment theory, we often pathologize yearning and sadness as signs of insecure attachment. But Mirabai's bhakti tradition suggests a paradox: profound love requires accepting that loss is woven into connection. Sacred Grief acknowledges that your romantic partner will disappoint you, that you cannot merge completely, that all relationships contain the seed of separation—either through change, misunderstanding, or death. Rather than avoid this grief through emotional numbing or obsessive pursuit, you learn to hold it as part of love's deepest truth. This reframes attachment anxiety not as a flaw to fix but as evidence of your capacity to love. Paradoxically, consciously grieving what you might lose often creates more secure, peaceful attachment because you stop fighting love's fundamental vulnerability.
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.