The bhakti concept of virah (loving separation) as a gateway to mudita and karuna, transforming grief into compassion for all suffering beings.
Mirabai's life was marked by virah—the exquisite pain of separation from her beloved. Rather than denying this anguish, bhakti philosophy transforms it into a vehicle for spiritual deepening. This sacred longing becomes relevant to Buddhist practice through mudita (sympathetic joy) and karuna (compassion): when we feel the absence of connection, we touch the universal experience of dukkha that all sentient beings endure. Mirabai's devotional poetry channels personal grief into devotional ecstasy, revealing that separation and loss can awaken our hearts to others' pain. In relationships, virah teaches us that loving someone means accepting their otherness and the inevitable gaps between self and other. This acceptance prevents possessiveness and cultivates compassion for our own and others' loneliness. The Brahmaviharas require this willingness to feel absence without hardening: mudita celebrates others' joy even in our sorrow, and karuna extends tenderness toward all beings experiencing separation.
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