The bhakti understanding of relationship as natural rhythms of separation and union, normalizing conflict and distance as healthy cycles rather than attachment failures.
Viyoga (separation) and samyoga (union) are complementary states in bhakti literature, not opposites to be conquered. In Mirabai's songs, she moves fluidly between longing for Krishna and ecstatic presence with him, treating both states as sacred. Attachment anxiety often stems from resistance to viyoga—the belief that separation or conflict signals the end of love. Attachment avoidance manifests as resistance to samyoga—maintaining emotional distance to avoid vulnerability. This concept reframes relationship cycles as natural. All couples experience viyoga: misunderstandings, conflicts, times when partners feel distant or at odds. These are not failures of love but inherent to intimacy. Samyoga—moments of deep connection, alignment, passion—naturally alternate with viyoga. Rather than pathologize the rhythm, secure attachment embraces it. Mirabai's wisdom teaches that love survives separation because it is not dependent on constant physical presence or agreement. By trusting in natural cycles, partners develop resilience: viyoga becomes an opportunity for self-reflection and deeper appreciation; samyoga becomes genuine reunion rather than desperate clinging.
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