The bhakti principle that true intimacy requires each partner to prioritize their own liberation, not merge into dependence.
Mirabai abandoned her marriage to pursue her devotion, choosing freedom over social duty. This wasn't selfish; it was essential. In bhakti, attachment to the divine—to truth itself—supersedes all other bonds. This translates directly to romantic relationships: secure attachment requires that both partners maintain their autonomy, their truth-seeking, and their refusal to be consumed by the relationship. Many people enter relationships seeking to escape themselves; Mirabai's model insists you must know and love yourself first. When both partners prioritize freedom and growth over fusion, paradoxically, intimacy deepens. You can trust someone who isn't clinging. You can receive love from someone who could leave but chooses to stay. This framework challenges the romantic myth that love means losing yourself. Instead, the bhakti vision reveals that the healthiest partnerships involve two free people choosing each other repeatedly—not bound by desperation but by authentic recognition and shared truth-seeking.
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