Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Viraha: The Longing That Transforms

The bhakti practice of sitting with yearning and absence as catalysts for spiritual awakening and self-knowledge.

Mira
Why It Matters

Viraha—longing, separation, absence—is the central emotional motor of bhakti devotion. Mirabai lived in viraha for Krishna, and her suffering became her poetry. Viraha is not passivity; it is active, aching presence. When you grieve a lost identity, viraha teaches that the longing itself—for who you were, for the certainty that self once held, for the life that accompanied it—is not something to be erased but inhabited consciously. This longing is often dismissed as nostalgia or regret. But examined closely, viraha reveals what you actually valued in that former self. What are you truly missing? Security? Purpose? A sense of belonging? By dwelling in viraha rather than fleeing it, you learn what matters most. The examined heart uses longing as a compass toward authentic desire, distinct from habitual attachment.

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