Mirabai's practice of self-scrutiny as a method for uncovering hidden attachment patterns, wounds, and contradictions within oneself.
Mirabai's poetry reveals a woman in constant dialogue with her own contradictions: her desire for freedom warring with social expectation, her devotion tested by doubt, her love questioned by logic. This unflinching self-examination models what secure attachment requires: the willingness to look honestly at your own patterns, triggers, and wounds. Many insecure attachment styles persist because people avoid this internal scrutiny—blaming partners instead of examining their own reactivity, or remaining unconscious of how childhood wounds shape current relationship behavior. The examined heart practice means asking: What do I actually need from my partner versus what am I projecting? Where am I seeking rescue or attempting to rescue? How does my family history haunt my current attachments? Mirabai's example shows that such examination isn't self-flagellation but liberation—the more clearly you see your own patterns, the more freedom you have to choose different responses. This practice transforms attachment from an unconscious compulsion into a conscious choice.
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