Understanding how we project unconscious desires and wounds onto partners, and how self-knowledge clarifies genuine attraction from fantasy.
In Mirabai's poetry, the divine beloved functions as an infinite mirror: whatever she brings to her devotion, she encounters reflected back. This parallels psychological insight: we are profoundly attracted to people who carry projections of our unresolved needs, repressed desires, and shadow selves. Until you examine these projections, attraction feels like destiny but often repeats unconscious patterns. Mirabai's constant self-examination was her method of clarifying who she actually loved versus what she unconsciously sought. In modern attraction, this means asking hard questions: Are you attracted to *this person* or to the role they play in your narrative? Does this attraction move you toward wholeness or toward compulsion? Do you see them clearly or through a veil of need? The beloved-as-mirror teaches that genuine attraction becomes possible only as you do the inner work of recognizing your own projections. This is not romantic or easy, but it is liberating: when you know yourself better, you can love more freely and choose more wisely.
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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