Mirabai's poetry of longing and loss as a teaching on mudita—sympathetic joy—and how grief in relationships reveals our capacity for boundless care.
Viraham—the pain of separation from the beloved—was Mirabai's constant companion and her greatest teacher. Rather than viewing separation as failure, she transmuted it into devotion. This illuminates mudita (sympathetic joy) in a rarely explored way: we can celebrate and stay connected to those we've lost or are distant from by holding their wellbeing as sacred, not their presence as required. Mirabai teaches that relationships don't end; they transform. Grief is love with nowhere to go—until we redirect it toward wishing the beloved's flourishing, wherever they are. In modern relationships, viraham reframes separation anxiety as an invitation to deepen unconditional care. It asks: Can we love people through their absence? Can we practice mudita for those no longer in our daily lives? Her examined heart shows that the deepest relationships transcend proximity, grounded instead in a love that survives time, distance, and even death.
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