In bhakti tradition, the ultimate goal of love is liberation from fear and false self, which enables truly secure bonding.
Mirabai's pursuit of spiritual freedom—defying caste, family, and gender norms—reveals a paradox: freedom is both the goal of devotion and the condition for secure attachment. Insecure attachment patterns are fundamentally unfree—anxious individuals are enslaved to approval-seeking, avoidant individuals imprisoned in self-protection. Secure attachment, by contrast, arises when partners are fundamentally free: free from desperate need, free from terror of abandonment, free to choose presence. In bhakti psychology, devotion to a beloved (human or divine) is the path to this freedom because it redirects fearful self-focus toward something larger. When applied to romantic relationships, this suggests that partners who maintain individual freedom—pursuits, friendships, identity—actually develop more secure attachment than those who merge completely. Mirabai maintained her own spiritual path even while devoted to Krishna. Secure couples practice this: supporting each other's growth, maintaining separate interests, refusing enmeshment. Freedom and attachment aren't opposites; freedom is the soil in which secure love grows.
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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