Mirabai's constant meditation on Krishna as a model for the daily, unglamorous practice of showing up and paying attention to one's partner.
Bhakti practice involves sustained, deliberate attention—recitation, ritual, contemplation, conversation directed toward the beloved. Mirabai didn't love Krishna once; she loved him in thousands of moments, through songs, service, remembrance. This models what secure attachment requires: not grand romantic gestures but steady, humble presence. Anxious attachment often seeks dramatic proof of love (intensity, constant contact), while avoidant attachment withdraws from the ordinary intimacy that genuine attachment requires. The devotion practice asks: Can you show up tomorrow the same way you did today? Can you listen when they're tired? Can you remember what matters to them? Can you return, again and again, to paying attention even when passion settles into companionship? Mirabai's devotion was repetitive, sometimes seeming monotonous to outsiders, yet inexhaustibly creative. In relationships, this suggests that secure attachment grows through small, consistent acts of attention—asking, remembering, noticing, staying present—that accumulate into unshakeable trust and intimacy.
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