The distinction between healthy commitment to a partner and the self-abandoning dependency patterns that masquerade as love and devotion.
Mirabai devoted her life to Krishna with absolute commitment, yet this devotion strengthened rather than dissolved her essential self. She didn't lose her voice; she found it. This concept provides crucial differentiation in attachment language: devotion and dependency are opposites, not synonyms. Anxious attachment often calls itself devotion while actually representing dependency—the need for another's validation to feel real. Mirabai's bhakti demonstrates true devotion: choosing to orient around something larger than yourself while maintaining integrity, boundaries, and selfhood. In choosing partners, this framework asks: Am I devoted to this person's growth and my own, or am I dependent on them for my sense of worth? True devotion enhances both people; dependency diminishes both through enmeshment. Partners in secure attachment can be genuinely devoted—prioritizing the relationship, showing up consistently, offering their whole heart—while maintaining their own spiritual practice, friendships, aspirations, and solitude. Mirabai shows that the most devoted lovers are those not destroyed by loss, suggesting that real devotion includes wise boundaries and self-preservation alongside generous commitment.
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