The paradoxical pain of separation from the beloved, which legitimizes grief as a sign of depth rather than weakness, and reframes longing as spiritual practice.
Mirabai lived in constant viraha—the exquisite pain of separation from Krishna—and made it central to her spiritual practice rather than something to overcome. This framework transforms how we hold grief and the rage it can trigger. Viraha teaches that deep feeling is not a flaw but evidence of capacity for love. The rage underneath grief often stems from the expectation that we should 'move on' or 'let go.' Viraha rejects this cultural timeline, honoring that true losses create permanent tender places. By naming longing as sacred, we stop pathologizing our anger at having to live without what we love. Mirabai's songs show viraha as creative fuel—the pain itself becomes the meeting place with the divine. This concept invites us to examine rage as potentially pointing toward something we genuinely love and have lost, rather than merely destructive emotion.
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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