A framework recognizing that desire itself—unexamined and unclaimed—often precedes and enables betrayal and dishonesty in relationships.
Mirabai never pretended not to desire Krishna; her devotion was erotic, ecstatic, and unashamed. This radical honesty about desire stands in contrast to the repression and hidden wants that often fuel affairs and betrayals. When desire goes unnamed and unintegrated—whether sexual, emotional, or spiritual—it tends to leak out sideways through deception. The examined heart asks: What desire am I denying in myself and in my partner? What am I not saying? The dance of desire and deception suggests that many affairs emerge not from sudden lust but from chronic unexpressed longings. By Mirabai's model, the path toward trustworthiness requires claiming one's own desires openly and inviting one's partner to do the same. This doesn't eliminate temptation, but it removes one of betrayal's primary breeding grounds: the shadowy space between what we feel and what we admit.
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