Mirabai's rejection of societal marriage duties reveals how anxious-preoccupied attachment often stems from internalized obligations rather than authentic choice.
Mirabai famously refused the marriage arranged for her by her in-laws, scandalizing her family by claiming Krishna as her true beloved. Her radical act illuminates how attachment patterns often begin with cultural conditioning—we learn to attach anxiously because duty demands it, not because love calls us. Many people unconsciously recreate obligatory relationships, staying in partnerships out of guilt, fear of judgment, or ingrained belief that love means self-sacrifice. Mirabai's freedom teaches that authentic attachment requires genuine choice, not coercion or internalized pressure. When examining your attachment style, ask: Am I choosing this partner freely, or am I bound by invisible chains of obligation, expectation, or shame? Her life demonstrates that sometimes the most loving act is to acknowledge when a relationship no longer serves spiritual truth and to have the courage to honor that recognition.
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