Virah (separation pain) as a framework for understanding the existential ache of losing public figures who shaped our inner worlds.
Virah, the pain of separation from the beloved, was Mirabai's constant companion—a longing so acute it structured her entire spiritual life. This concept illuminates why collective grief for public figures cuts so deeply: these individuals were present in our intimate spaces—our screens, our earbuds, our imaginations—even as we never knew them. When a beloved artist, activist, or leader dies, we experience virah: the pain of separation from someone who lived inside us. Mirabai's poetry teaches us that this pain is not frivolous or misdirected. The grief is real because the relationship was real in the ways that mattered most. By naming it virah, we honor the specific quality of public loss—the strange intimacy of one-directional love, the ache of absence from someone we believed we knew. This reframes collective mourning as spiritually legitimate, not parasocial delusion.
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