Mirabai's dancing, singing, and physical expression of spiritual states show how embodied emotional release prevents the suppression that creates anxious-avoidant cycles.
Mirabai danced in temple courtyards and sang publicly about her love for Krishna in ways that scandalized her society—her body and voice were instruments of devotional expression. This embodied practice addresses the somatic dimensions of insecure attachment where emotions become trapped in bodies, manifesting as physical tension, numbness, or dysregulation. Anxious attachers often suppress their own needs to focus on partners' emotional states; avoidant types often disconnect from embodied feeling entirely. Mirabai's model suggests that secure attachment requires capacity for full emotional and physical expression. This might translate to: dancing or moving when emotions are big, singing or vocalizing feelings, creating art that expresses inner states, or any practice where emotion flows through the body rather than lodging in the mind. Partner selection benefits from this embodied awareness—you become attuned to when you're suppressing or disconnecting, and you can choose partners who appreciate and encourage your authentic expression. The body becomes teacher, showing through tension, numbness, or aliveness whether a relationship supports your wholeness.
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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