Mirabai's continuous experience of longing teaches that processing grief in relationships means integration, not the false hope of resolution.
Throughout her life, Mirabai experienced the grief of separation from Krishna—a grief she never resolved, only deepened and integrated. Rather than seeking closure or moving on, she transformed sorrow into devotion, into song, into wisdom. This stance differs from contemporary psychology's goal of 'moving past' grief. Mirabai's approach offers something richer: integration. In attachment work, this means acknowledging losses in relationships—whether betrayals, mismatches, or endings—without the expectation that you'll 'get over' them completely. Unresolved grief often drives destructive attachment patterns: we seek new partners to erase old pain, we cling desperately to avoid another loss, or we wall ourselves off. Mirabai demonstrates a third way. Feel the grief fully. Express it. Let it crack you open. Transform it into compassion, into artistry, into deeper presence. This framework suggests that secure attachment includes capacity to hold loss without being defined by it, to love fully while acknowledging that all attachment involves eventual separation. The examined heart grieves what it loves, and continues loving anyway.
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