The bhakti concept of viraha (separation from the beloved) as a spiritual practice that sanctifies grief over lost identity rather than pathologizing it.
Viraha is the ache of separation—Mirabai's constant refrain in her poetry. In bhakti, viraha is not depression but devotional intensity. When you grieve the person you were, you experience a kind of viraha: separation from your former self. Mirabai teaches that this longing is sacred, a sign of deepening love for truth. Rather than rushing to "recover" or "move on," viraha invites you to dwell in the productive pain of becoming. The examined heart recognizes that grief for lost identity is viraha for a self you've outgrown. This framework transforms mourning into spiritual discipline. Your tears are not weakness but evidence that you loved yourself enough to demand authenticity. Viraha becomes the bridge between who you were and who you're becoming.
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