Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Courage to Be Known

Mirabai's radical transparency in her devotional poetry models the vulnerability required for secure attachment—being fully seen and choosing to remain.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's poetry leaves nothing hidden—her longing, her rage at divine absence, her ecstatic union, her sensual passion, her despair, her joy. She refuses the protective armor that conceals the heart. This radical transparency is essential to secure attachment, which requires the courage to be known. Insecure attachment patterns often develop because early experience teaches that being truly known is dangerous—that your real self, if revealed, will be rejected, exploited, or abandoned. So you create a protective false self, manage impressions, hide vulnerabilities, test whether it's safe to be authentic. But secure attachment can only develop through the accumulation of experiences where you are genuinely known and still accepted, loved, and chosen. Mirabai's examined heart constantly asks: Am I hiding? Am I performing? Am I offering my true self or a managed version? The bhakti path teaches that authentic love requires authentic presence. This vulnerability isn't reckless—it's discerning about whom to trust—but it's uncompromising about honesty. In secure attachment, both partners gradually lower their protective armor, discovering through repeated experiences that being truly known is not just safe but deeply bonding.

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Love & Relationships
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