Rather than avoiding loss, moving through grief about past relationships reveals which attachment patterns no longer serve you and what you're truly seeking.
Mirabai's love poetry is saturated with grief—the pain of separation from her beloved, the sorrow of misunderstanding, the ache of devotion without return. Rather than bypass this grief, she inhabited it fully, and it deepened her wisdom. In insecure attachment, people often avoid grieving past relationships because the pain confirms their deepest fears: that they're unlovable, that love is dangerous, that intimacy leads to abandonment. So they rush into new relationships to numb the grief, repeating familiar patterns. By contrast, if you grieve your past relationships—the losses, the ways you abandoned yourself, the ways you were abandoned—you can extract their wisdom. What did you learn about yourself? What patterns do you want to release? What do you genuinely value? Grief, fully felt, moves you from reactive choosing (desperate, frightened, numb) to conscious choosing (aware, boundaried, clear). Mirabai shows us that profound feeling and wise action are not opposites.
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