Mirabai's bhakti demonstrates how passionate devotion can heal early relational wounds and rewire insecure attachment patterns.
Many people come to spiritual devotion with wounds from early attachment—absent parents, conditional love, betrayal. Mirabai herself lost her husband young and was marginalized by her family. Rather than becoming cynical about love, she channeled her longing into bhakti—a practice of loving what could not be lost because it was transcendent. This is not avoidance; it is alchemy. The intense, embodied practice of bhakti—singing, dancing, prayer, grief—engages the nervous system in a way that can gradually reshape insecure attachment. When we practice devotion (to a person, a practice, a vision), we exercise the neural pathways of secure attachment: trust, vulnerability, presence, surrender. For those with anxious attachment histories, bhakti offers a container for intensity that doesn't collapse into neediness. For the avoidantly attached, it provides a disciplined path toward feeling and opening. Mirabai's life suggests that attachment healing is not primarily cognitive but relational and embodied—a practice of loving fully, consciously, and courageously until our nervous systems learn that devotion is safe.
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