The bhakti concept of viyoga (separation from the beloved) reframes public mourning as a spiritual experience of rupture that deepens rather than diminishes love.
In Mirabai's poetry, viyoga—the anguish of separation from Krishna—becomes a doorway to profound love rather than its negation. Public tragedy creates collective viyoga: we are suddenly separated from the presence of someone who shaped our lives or sense of the world. This framework transforms grief from pathology into spiritual practice. Viyoga teaches that separation is not erasure; it is intensification. The pain witnesses the depth of connection. When mourning public figures, viyoga invites us to honor that the acute pain of their absence confirms how much they mattered. This bhakti perspective sanctifies collective grief as a legitimate expression of love, not weakness.
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