Honoring what your body knows and communicates about love, beyond rational words alone.
Mirabai's bhakti was intensely embodied—dancing, tears, physical yearning expressed in her songs. She knew that the heart speaks through the body in ways words cannot capture. Modern communication theory often privileges rational discourse, but love communication requires attending to bodily knowing: the tightness in your chest, the warmth of recognition, the flinch of hurt. When you communicate in love relationships, notice what your body is saying alongside your words. Sometimes a tone of voice carries more truth than content; a turned-away shoulder speaks louder than reassurance. Mirabai's example invites you to name bodily experience: 'My chest feels tight when you say that' or 'I feel warmth and safety when you hold my hand while we talk.' This integrates somatic awareness into communication. It prevents the disconnect where words claim one thing while the body signals another, which often breeds mistrust. Honoring the body's language makes communication more whole and truthful.
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