A form of love bound by devotion rather than ownership, showing how attraction transcends the need to control or keep another.
Anurag describes a love rooted in genuine affection and spiritual connection rather than desire to possess. Mirabai's anurag for Krishna operated independently of whether he returned her love in conventional terms—she loved the divine principle he represented, not to capture him but to dissolve into him. This challenges Western attraction's narrative of mutual reciprocity and exclusivity as love's proof. Anurag suggests a mature attraction where we celebrate another's fullness without needing them to validate us, where we love their essence rather than their capacity to meet our needs. Applied to relationships, anurag invites us to examine possessive patterns: the jealousy, the controlling behaviors, the desperation for assurance. True attraction, this concept proposes, requires releasing the grip that strangles connection.
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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