Mirabai's deep engagement with separation pain as a doorway to mature, secure attachment rather than avoidance.
Mirabai did not bypass her grief at Krishna's absence; she dove into it, sang it, embodied it. Yet she emerged not traumatized but transformed—grief became her path to deeper understanding. In attachment theory, avoidantly attached people often suppress grief to maintain independence, while anxiously attached people get stuck in it. Mirabai's bhakti offers a middle path: feel the grief fully, express it completely, and allow it to teach you about love itself. When partners experience inevitable loss—unmet needs, moments of disconnection, the impossibility of perfect merger—they can follow Mirabai's example: honor the pain without collapsing into it. This means crying, journaling, creating, or speaking the loss aloud, knowing that on the other side lies not numbness but clarified love. The examined heart learns from separation that love persists beyond any single interaction or even relationship; this perspective builds resilience. Partners who can grieve together, rather than defend against grief, develop genuine security because they've proven to themselves and each other that love survives difficulty.
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