Using the partner as a mirror for self-knowledge rather than a solution to self-doubt, reflecting Mirabai's use of Krishna as spiritual mirror.
In Mirabai's poetry, Krishna serves as a mirror reflecting her deepest self—desires, fears, possibilities. She doesn't seek Krishna to create identity but to witness and know herself more fully. Applied to attachment: secure partners use each other as mirrors for growth, not as solutions to internal emptiness. Anxious attachment patterns often treat partners as identity-creators—'I am loved, therefore I exist.' Avoidant patterns resist the mirror entirely, fearing exposure. This concept invites a middle path: allow your partner's perception of you to inform self-knowledge without determining self-worth. Notice what triggers you—defensiveness reveals wounds. Observe what you admire in partners—it often reflects disowned aspects of yourself. The beloved becomes a teacher through honest reflection, helping you see blind spots with compassion. This transforms relationships from self-esteem devices into vehicles for genuine self-knowledge and growth, naturally healing insecure attachment patterns.
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