Mirabai's ecstatic embodied practices reveal how secure attachment integrates physical, emotional, and spiritual dimensions of love.
Mirabai danced, sang, and moved her body in devotional ecstasy—she didn't separate spirit from flesh but saw the body as a sacred vehicle for love's expression. This integration matters profoundly for attachment styles. Anxious attachment often splits into two extremes: either using sexuality to secure a partner's presence, or dissociating from the body to avoid vulnerability. Avoidant attachment frequently treats the body as a site of unwanted demand. Mirabai's embodied bhakti teaches that secure attachment honors all dimensions of love: the physical sensation of another's presence, the emotional resonance of being truly seen, the spiritual alignment of shared values and meaning. Secure partners are comfortable in their bodies, capable of sexual expression without using it as a control mechanism, and able to receive physical affection as communication of care. They don't fragment into head and heart, performance and authenticity. Mirabai's dances weren't performances for an audience but expressions of her whole self in relation to the divine. Similarly, secure attachment includes comfort with full embodied presence—the nervous system relaxed enough to receive touch, the body able to signal needs and boundaries, physical intimacy integrated with emotional and spiritual connection. This wholeness is what Mirabai modeled.
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