Using the devotee-beloved dynamic as a model for healthy human relationships that honor both separateness and union.
Mirabai's relationship with Krishna—always yearning, never possessive, accepting divine absence and presence—offers a template for human love that transcends possessiveness. The beloved (whether divine or human) is recognized as ultimately other, irreducible, free. This acceptance paradoxically deepens intimacy because it removes the demand that the other complete or validate us. Applied to human togetherness, this framework suggests that the healthiest relationships maintain what psychologists call secure attachment: I know I am whole alone; I choose union; I accept your autonomy; separation does not annihilate me. Mirabai never demands Krishna's return on her timeline; she doesn't reduce him to her emotional needs. This mature love—simultaneously devoted and detached, intimate and spacious—becomes possible when we internalize the beloved rather than require their constant physical presence. For modern partnerships, this means honoring your beloved's freedom as sacred, even as you commit deeply.
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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