A structured practice of consciously experiencing and metabolizing absence, loss, and unmet desire without numbing or aggressive acting out.
Viraha—the pain of separation—can become yoga, a discipline or practice, when approached consciously. Rather than resisting the ache of absence or its companion, rage, viraha yoga invites sustained attention to these states. Mirabai's poetry and songs are viraha yoga: she does not overcome her longing for Krishna but deepens her relationship to it, making it the substance of her spiritual practice. This is not wallowing but witnessing. Applied to grief with its underlying rage, viraha yoga suggests a middle path between numbness and explosion: the capacity to feel loss fully, to let anger arise and be observed without judgment or action, to allow these states to transform us. This requires discipline—showing up daily to the rawness, refusing both to weaponize the rage and to suppress it. Through consistent practice, the intensity itself becomes sustainable; we develop the capacity to contain what cannot be fixed, to long for what may never arrive, and to find meaning in the longing itself.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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