The bhakti concept of viraha (separation from the beloved) as a path to upekkha (equanimity), transforming grief into non-attachment without coldness.
Mirabai's devastating poems of separation (viraha) from Krishna reveal how longing pain, when fully felt and surrendered, becomes equanimity—not as detachment but as profound acceptance. This reframes upekkha beyond indifference into wise balance grounded in love. Viraha teaches that separation is inherent to embodied existence; resisting this truth creates suffering, while embracing it opens equanimity. In relationships, this concept addresses the Brahmaviharas' deepest challenge: loving completely while accepting impermanence, distance, and loss. Mirabai's tradition shows that equanimity deepens through full emotional expression, not suppression. Her examined heart acknowledges grief as love's twin. Applied practice involves naming losses in relationships, feeling them consciously, and allowing that intensity to birth wisdom about non-grasping. This way, couples can sustain intimacy while releasing possessive attachment, creating space for both connection and freedom within the Brahmaviharas framework.
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