The practice of holding grief and desire together as spiritual experience rather than problems to solve, grounding rage in the sacred nature of longing itself.
Viyoga—divine separation or longing—was central to Mirabai's theology. Rather than viewing her abandonment, loss, and unsatisfied desire as traumas to overcome, she sacralized them as direct encounters with the divine. This reframes grief and rage not as pathological states but as evidence of profound connection. When we rage, we often rage because something matters desperately. Viyoga teaches that this intensity of longing is spiritually legitimate and generative. The anger underneath grief becomes a form of prayer, a testimony to what we love. Applying this to contemporary life means recognizing that our rage at injustice, loss, or disconnection isn't a sign of failure—it's a sign of depth, commitment, and uncompromised values. Longing itself becomes sacred ground.
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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