The paradox of bhakti separation (viraha) where absence of the beloved generates both exquisite longing and volcanic rage—two sides of one intensity.
In bhakti, viraha—the pain of separation from the divine—is not passive sorrow but an active, burning state. Mirabai's poems express this as simultaneous longing and fury: rage that Krishna keeps his distance, grief at the beloved's absence, and desperate yearning for reunion. This concept illuminates how grief and anger are often inseparable; they are not contradictory emotions but expressions of the same core truth—that something beloved is missing or lost. For those working with the rage underneath grief, viraha offers a framework: examine whether your anger is actually a cry of love. The fury may be asking, 'Why have you left me? How can you not return?' By acknowledging the longing-fury paradox, we honor both the passion and the pain, neither dismissing the rage nor being consumed by it.
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.