Mirabai's radical choice to abandon marriage and social position reveals that the deepest attachment need may be freedom itself—to love authentically on your own terms.
Mirabai's life was a continuous act of choosing freedom over institutional safety. She refused the role of dutiful wife, rejected family expectations, and relinquished social approval to follow her heart's deepest truth. This reveals something crucial about attachment: the most secure attachment style includes freedom as a non-negotiable need. Many people with insecure attachment choose partners who restrict their freedom—abusers, controllers, or those who demand they shrink themselves. Mirabai's examined heart recognized that some attachments imprison rather than liberate. Her bhakti wasn't confined to the domestic sphere; it demanded movement, expression, public presence. When choosing partners, this concept asks: Does this relationship expand or contract my freedom? Do I feel liberated to become more myself, or compelled to diminish? Mirabai teaches that secure attachment paradoxically requires the willingness to walk away. She chose devotion to Krishna over devotion to a husband, demonstrating that alignment with one's deepest truth supersedes social partnership. Freedom as an attachment need reframes partner selection from seeking security to seeking authentic mutual expansion.
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