Mirabai's embodied devotion through dance and song as a model for moving from dissociated or mentally anxious attachment into present, sensory, joyful connection.
Mirabai was famous for her ecstatic dancing—her whole body was involved in her devotion. She danced in temples, on streets, in altered states of consciousness. This embodied practice stands in stark contrast to anxious attachment, which often lives in the mind: catastrophizing about the future, replaying the past, seeking reassurance through mental rumination. Mirabai's model invites us into the body—into sensation, breath, movement, and presence. For attachment work, this is transformative: when you feel anxious in your relationship, can you come into your body? Can you feel your feet on the ground, your breath moving, the aliveness of your own form? This grounds you in the present moment rather than the feared future. Similarly, ecstatic presence in intimate moments—being fully there, fully felt, fully sensing—is the antidote to the dissociation that often accompanies both anxious and avoidant patterns. Mirabai's dancing teaches that love is not primarily a mental or emotional category but a full-bodied, sensory, joyful engagement with life and the beloved.
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