The bhakti experience of longing and grief that deepens compassion by teaching presence with pain rather than avoiding it.
Viraha—the pain of separation from the beloved—is central to Mirabai's poetry and bhakti tradition. Rather than denying or transcending this ache, bhakti sanctifies it as a path to deeper love and understanding. Buddhist Brahmaviharas include mudita (sympathetic joy) and compassion, which require the capacity to be present with others' suffering without turning away. Viraha teaches this presence. When we experience the grief of separation—whether temporary or permanent—we develop empathy for all beings experiencing loss. Mirabai transformed her grief into ecstatic devotion, finding the divine within longing itself. In relationships, practicing viraha means acknowledging that love includes loss, distance, and the inevitable changes that distance brings. This acceptance prevents compassion from becoming conditional; we learn to love across separation, to hold joy and sorrow simultaneously, and to extend this nuanced compassion to others navigating their own grief and impermanence.
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