Mirabai's sensual, embodied devotion reclaims desire and physicality as sacred, countering the disembodied or shame-based attachment patterns rooted in repression.
Despite her devotion to a divine beloved, Mirabai's poetry is radically embodied and sensual—she speaks of longing, touch, physical presence, sexual desire. She refuses the false choice between spirituality and embodiment. Many attachment patterns are distorted by shame about desire or disconnection from the body. Anxious attachers may use sexuality to secure love or merge with partners. Avoidant attachers may suppress desire or use sex mechanically without intimacy. Both patterns disconnect body from heart. Mirabai's reclamation of embodied love suggests that secure attachment includes sexual and physical desire as sacred dimensions of connection, not separate from or opposed to spiritual or emotional intimacy. Can you feel desire for your partner without shame? Can you be physically present without needing it to mean emotional fusion? Can you express affection and sexuality as natural expressions of love? Her tradition invites a wholeness where body, heart, mind, and spirit are integrated rather than compartmentalized. Reclaiming the body in partnership means honoring physical presence, touch, and sensuality as legitimate dimensions of authentic love.
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