A form of sorrow that increases rather than diminishes love—the strength to grieve what's lost without becoming bitter.
Udasi in Hindi poetics means melancholy or pensiveness—but not the melancholy of defeat. It is the exquisite sorrow of longing for what is distant, beloved, impossible. Mirabai lived in perpetual udasi for Krishna, a longing that never hardened into complaint or bitterness but instead deepened her spiritual practice. For anticipatory civilizational grief, udasi offers an alternative to both denial and despair. It is the capacity to hold a noble sorrow—to acknowledge what we're losing without becoming cynical or cruel. This longing can motivate our most creative work, our deepest compassion, our refusal to abandon others in collapse. Udasi teaches that grief can be generative, that the ache of missing something can be the source of poetry, meaning, and connection rather than its death.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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