Viraha bhakti (the yoga of separation and yearning) as a spiritual discipline that deepens the examined heart through sustained collective longing.
Viraha bhakti—devotion born from separation and longing—is the emotional core of Mirabai's poetry. She did not seek to overcome her ache for Krishna but to deepen it into wisdom. Viraha bhakti applied to collective grief means we do not rush to 'closure' but instead sit with collective longing. When we mourn public figures or shared tragedies, there is an ache: the sense of unfinished conversation, interrupted potential, the world the lost one will not see. Viraha bhakti honors this ache as spiritually productive. The examined heart practices viraha not as pathology but as a relationship with loss that continues beyond death. Collective longing—channeled through memorials, art, stories, and ongoing remembrance—keeps the connection alive while accepting its altered form. This framework is especially powerful for tragedies where systemic injustice prevented someone from living fully. The grief becomes not merely personal but prophetic, a refusal to forget or accept preventable suffering. Viraha bhakti teaches us that mourning, when conscious, is a profound form of love.
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