Mirabai's virah poetry—longing and separation from the beloved—provides a language for the acute ache of losing your former self.
Mirabai's most powerful devotional songs describe the pain of separation from Krishna: the ache of absence, the longing that cuts through daily life, the way memory sharpens grief. Virah—separation tinged with devotion—became her vehicle for emotional truth. When you grieve who you were before, this concept offers permission to express the full intensity of loss through artistic expression. The separation you're mourning is real; the person you were is genuinely absent. Mirabai's songs suggest that rather than hastening past grief or minimizing it, you can pour your sorrow into creative articulation. This transforms private pain into universal language that others recognize. The Songs of Separation model how grief, when fully expressed, becomes a bridge between your former and emerging self. Each song Mirabai wrote about longing was simultaneously a love letter to Krishna and a map of her own transformation, showing how separation and love are inseparable.
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