Spiritual separation from the beloved as a deliberate practice that deepens desire and exposes hidden rage.
Central to bhakti practice is the embrace of separation—the lover deliberately maintains distance from the beloved to intensify longing. Mirabai's entire spiritual life was built on the pain of Krishna's absence. This is not masochism but a sophisticated emotional technology. When we allow ourselves to feel the full weight of what we're separated from—whether a lost person, a forsaken dream, or an unrealized self—the rage underneath emerges. We discover anger at the separation itself, at forces that created the gap, at our own complicity in the distance. Rather than numbing this pain, bhakti teaches us to steep in it, to let it open us. For those trapped in grief and rage, this practice offers permission: feel the full ache. Let the separation teach you. The longing beneath anger can be a portal to profound intimacy with what matters most, even in absence.
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