Viyog is the bhakti term for separation from the beloved; it becomes a named, ritualized response to triggering dates.
In Mirabai's devotional world, viyog—the acute pain of separation—is not pathology but a recognized state worthy of song and ritual. Rather than medicalizing grief or treating triggering dates as symptoms to manage, viyog offers a framework that says: this pain is real, named, and belongs in the spiritual life. Mirabai composed hundreds of verses during separation from her beloved Krishna, transforming longing into art. On a grief anniversary, viyog becomes a liturgy: a structured way to enter, express, and metabolize the separation. This might mean singing a lament, writing in a journal, or sitting in silence with the specific quality of absence. By naming the date as a viyog day, we honor both the relationship that was and the incompleteness that remains. The practice legitimizes the pain rather than rushing toward closure.
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