Mirabai's theology of viyoga (separation from the beloved) reframes civilizational loss as initiatory rather than merely tragic.
In bhakti tradition, viyoga—the pain of separation from Krishna—is not something to escape but to deepen through. Mirabai lived viyoga intensely: separated from her family, her guru, her homeland, ultimately from embodied certainty. Rather than treating these separations as obstacles to devotion, she recognized them as devotion's intensification. Applied to civilization: the anticipated separation from stable climate, abundance, and known social structures need not be experienced as pure devastation. Viyoga invites the question: what does this loss teach us about what we truly cherish? What intimacy with existence becomes possible when we release illusions of permanence? This doesn't spiritualize suffering but acknowledges that grief, when conscious, can crack open the heart toward deeper wisdom. Civilizational loss becomes an initiation into authentic presence.
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