The bhakti concept of separation-longing as a spiritual state, not pathology; anticipatory grief as a form of mystical yearning that intensifies presence and devotion.
Viyoga in bhakti tradition refers to the exquisite pain of separation from the beloved—a state Mirabai inhabited throughout her life, pining for Krishna's presence. Rather than viewing anticipatory grief as emotional dysfunction, viyoga honors it as a sacred ache. When you grieve someone still alive, you inhabit viyoga: you feel their absence within their presence. Mirabai transformed this pain into poetry, songs, and spiritual practice. She did not transcend viyoga; she used it as fuel for devotion. In anticipatory grief, viyoga teaches that the sharp awareness of separation is not a problem to solve but a teacher. The ache sharpens your attention. You notice their laugh, their particular way of moving. The pain reminds you that this person matters infinitely. Rather than medicating or intellectualizing the feeling, viyoga invites you to pour it into presence, conversation, and remembrance. The grief becomes the path.
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