The cultivation of full, undivided attention to your partner as a spiritual practice, transforming ordinary moments into sacred encounter.
Mirabai's devotional practice centered on complete presence—singing, dancing, meditating on Krishna with all her faculties engaged. This radical attention was itself the love; the relationship existed most fully in the quality of her presence. In contemporary attachment, anxious partners often give fragmented, needy attention ('Are you thinking of me?'), while avoidant partners withdraw attention as protection. Devotional presence offers a third path: bringing full awareness to moments with your partner without demand or agenda. This means: setting aside phones during conversations, listening without planning your response, noticing small details of their presence, creating rituals of connection (tea together, walking, talking). This practice naturally addresses attachment wounds—when you receive this quality of attention, anxious fears settle; when you give it, you experience your own agency and capacity. The paradox is that this generous attention, given freely without expectation, naturally creates secure connection. You become more real to each other through the quality of presence you offer.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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