Viveka (discernment) teaches that grief duration depends on whether we're attached to a person or to an image, fantasy, or role they played in our identity.
Viveka means discernment or discrimination—the ability to see clearly what is real versus what is projection. Mirabai developed fierce viveka: she distinguished between her actual spiritual longing and her family's expectations of her, between genuine devotion and social performance. Applied to grief, viveka asks: am I grieving this person as they were, or grieving an image, an unfulfilled promise, a role they played in my self-concept? Much extended grief isn't about the person but about what their loss reveals about us: our mortality, our lack of control, our fundamental aloneness. Viveka invites honest examination. Did we love them, or did we love how they made us feel about ourselves? Were we grieving their actual presence, or grieving who we thought we'd be with them? These questions sound harsh but are liberating. Mirabai's viveka allowed her to love Krishna purely, without needing him to be her savior or solution. The examined heart uses discernment to grieve what was actually loved rather than perpetuating grief for what was never quite real.
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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