The bhakti concept of longing and separation as a doorway to spiritual union, reframing grief as intimate connection rather than loss.
Virah—the ache of separation from the beloved—is central to Mirabai's poetry and bhakti practice. Rather than seeing grief as something to overcome, virah sanctifies it as the deepest form of intimacy with the divine. Mirabai's anguish over Krishna's absence becomes her greatest closeness; the pain of longing proves the reality of love. This framework radically recontextualizes grief: not as failure or pathology, but as evidence of profound attachment and spiritual maturity. When we grieve what we've lost, we honor how deeply we loved. Beneath the rage often lies this sacred ache—anger protecting grief, grief protecting love. By naming separation as virah, we access its generative power: the longing itself becomes the meeting place, and tears become a form of ecstatic communion with what we cherish.
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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