Viraha-sadhana frames the pain of loss as deliberate spiritual work, transforming grief from an obstacle into the actual path of development and self-discovery.
Viraha means separation or longing; sadhana means spiritual practice or discipline. Viraha-sadhana is the radical bhakti understanding that grief itself is the practice, not something to escape through practice. Mirabai lived this openly, using her separation from Krishna—and her earthly separations—as fuel for deepening consciousness. When you grieve lost identity, viraha-sadhana invites you to stop viewing grief as a problem to solve and instead engage it as your current practice. What does it mean to practice fully with this longing? To show up daily to the reality of change? To study your resistance, your fear, your attachment to who you were? This framework transforms passive suffering into active engagement with your own becoming. Rather than waiting until grief resolves to begin real work, viraha-sadhana suggests that engaging consciously with loss is itself the transformation. Your grief becomes your teacher.
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