The sacred mutual seeing in bhakti practice, revealing how healthy boundaries enable deeper witnessing and recognition between lovers.
Darshan is the blessing of seeing and being seen by the divine—a central bhakti practice where Mirabai sought Krishna's darshan with desperate longing. In contemporary relationships, darshan illuminates what boundaries actually create: space for genuine seeing. When you maintain healthy boundaries, you're not hiding from your partner; you're making it possible to be truly seen. Without boundaries, relating becomes reactive and survival-focused; with them, genuine witnessing becomes possible. Darshan in love means your partner sees the real you—not the version you've contorted into to keep them comfortable, and not the defended version you've armored against hurt. Paradoxically, boundaries allow for this vulnerability because they establish safety: both parties understand what is and isn't acceptable, creating container for authentic presence. This concept reframes boundaries as prerequisites for intimacy, not obstacles to it. True darshan requires both people to show up as themselves.
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