The Bhakti concept of viraha (longing separation) reframes collective grief as a spiritual condition, where absence becomes a profound teacher and connector.
Viraha—the ache of separation from the beloved—was Mirabai's constant companion and her gateway to transcendence. In collective mourning, viraha dignifies the sharp pain of absence rather than rushing toward closure. When we lose a public figure or witness collective tragedy, viraha teaches us that the void they leave is real and instructive, not something to be quickly resolved. This Bhakti framework honors grief's depth and duration, resisting the modern impulse to 'move on.' Viraha also creates unexpected unity: many strangers united in longing for the same lost person or in witnessing the same unbearable event discover they are not alone in their pain. This shared absence becomes a paradoxical bridge, connecting mourners across geography and circumstance through the very emptiness that defines loss.
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