Mirabai's rejection of social imprisonment for love reveals how secure attachment requires both people to choose freely, not from obligation or fear.
Mirabai defied her family, her caste, and social expectation to pursue her spiritual devotion. She understood that love forced by duty or constrained by control is not love—it's imprisonment. This principle cuts to the heart of anxious attachment: the desperate fear that if you don't cling, your partner will leave. But true partnership cannot exist in captivity. When either partner feels trapped—by neediness, by obligation, by unspoken threats—both are imprisoned. Mirabai's freedom teaches that love must be freely chosen, continuously, by both people. This means examining whether your attachment style restricts your partner's autonomy or your own. Do you stay in relationships out of fear rather than choice? Do you demand constant reassurance, monitoring your partner's whereabouts and emotional state? Do you avoid commitment to avoid vulnerability? Freedom-based attachment means trusting that if both people choose to stay, that choice is real. This security paradoxically makes relationships stronger, because presence becomes gift rather than debt.
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