Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Body as Temple: Sacred Embodiment

Mirabai reclaimed her body from patriarchal control as a site of devotion, modeling how to inhabit our bodies securely in romantic relationship.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's life was an act of bodily reclamation. Widows in her culture were supposed to be invisible, ascetic, controlled. Instead, Mirabai danced, sang, moved through the world in ecstatic devotion. She used her body as an instrument of prayer, not shame. In attachment terms, this is radical: secure attachment includes secure embodiment. Many people with insecure attachment histories carry shame in their bodies—anxiously attached people may use their bodies to secure love (seduction, overgiving), while avoidantly attached people may dissociate from bodily sensation entirely. Mirabai's example teaches that the body is not a tool for securing love or a source of shame; it is a temple, sacred in itself. When we can inhabit our bodies with this reverence—feeling desire, pleasure, and vulnerability without either compulsion or numbing—we move toward secure attachment. The body becomes a site of honest feeling and genuine presence rather than strategic performance or defended numbness.

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