The bhakti practice of loving what is absent or lost, applied to grieving the civilization we thought we would inherit.
Viyoga—the pain of separation from the beloved—is central to Mirabai's poetry and bhakti tradition. Rather than a pathology, viyoga is a sophisticated emotional practice: the capacity to deepen love precisely through absence and loss. Mirabai loved Krishna across unbridgeable distance, and this longing became her greatest teacher. In anticipatory grief for civilization, viyoga reframes our mourning: we grieve not a failure but a transformation, a necessary separation from the future we imagined. This practice acknowledges that loving something we are losing is not denial but deepening presence. Viyoga teaches us to hold both the ache of what will not be and gratitude for what was. It converts anticipatory grief from a frozen state into a dynamic, devotional relationship with time itself—making loss into a pathway for mature love.
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