Mirabai's union with Krishna as an inner reality, suggesting that secure attachment includes relationship with one's own deeper self.
Mirabai ultimately realized that Krishna—her beloved—dwelt within her heart. This profound shift reframed her longing not as desperate reaching but as homecoming to herself. Modern attachment theory recognizes that secure individuals maintain a coherent internal working model—a stable sense of self that does not depend entirely on the partner's mood or response. Mirabai's spiritual realization mirrors this psychological truth: our deepest security comes from relationship with our own wholeness, not from the external beloved alone. Partners with anxious attachment often abandon themselves seeking validation; avoidantly attached partners flee internal depth through distance. The concept invites both patterns toward integration: developing an internalized secure base, a voice within that knows your worth independent of your partner's current response. This is not about emotional independence or detachment but about recognizing the beloved's qualities mirrored in yourself. When you meet your own depth, you no longer grasp at your partner to complete you, and intimacy becomes generative rather than consumptive.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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