The practice of inhabiting the physical body as an expression of devotion, treating embodied existence—sensation, desire, presence—as a legitimate path of love.
Mirabai's bhakti celebrates the body not as a prison to escape but as the vessel through which love is lived. Her poetry speaks of dancing, singing, dressing, adorning herself as acts of devotion. Her body was her prayer. This stands in radical contrast to traditions that treat the body as an obstacle to transcendence. For agape across traditions, this principle invites us to recognize that love is not merely abstract or intellectual—it is embodied, material, sensory. When we truly love, we are present in our bodies: we listen with our whole selves, we feel the other's presence, we allow ourselves to be affected. This means moving beyond the disembodied spirituality that treats the body as shameful or irrelevant. It means honoring desire, vulnerability, and the tender mortality of flesh. In relationships across deep differences, embodied presence becomes crucial: the willingness to sit with someone, to see their face, to share physical space. This challenges the isolation of digital connection and purely intellectual dialogue. Agape becomes real when we show up as whole beings—thinking, feeling, sensing, desiring—rather than as disembodied principles.
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