Reframing attachment as devotion—a practice of honoring and celebrating the beloved's freedom rather than possessing them.
Mirabai's love for Krishna was devotional, not possessive. She honored his divine nature and accepted she could never contain him; her joy came from serving and celebrating him, not controlling him. This stands in stark contrast to anxious attachment, which often manifests as possessiveness masked as love. Devotion, properly understood, is the opposite of possession: it says 'I celebrate who you are' rather than 'I need you to be who I need.' In partner selection and relationship maintenance, this concept invites a radical reorientation. Instead of asking 'Will this person complete me or abandon me?', devotion asks 'How can I honor this person's full humanity, including their independence from me?' Mirabai never demanded that Krishna prove his love through earthly presence; she found fullness in the relationship itself, not in possession or reassurance. For modern attachment styles, adopting a devotional stance means choosing partners we genuinely admire and want to celebrate, rather than those who simply fill our emptiness. This shift moves relationships from transactional to transformational.
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