The philosophical questioning of why you love, what love means, and whether love serves your becoming—speaking love's deepest inquiries aloud.
Mirabai asks her Krishna constantly: Why are you hidden? Why do you make me suffer? Why should I trust you? She doesn't ask these as rhetorical complaints but as genuine philosophical inquiry. The Interrogation of Love is the practice of bringing your deepest questions about the relationship into conversation—not as attacks but as real wondering. Many couples avoid the big questions: Do we grow together or apart? Are we choosing each other or habit? Is this love or convenience? Does this relationship help me become more myself? Mirabai's tradition shows that genuine devotion can hold rigorous questioning; in fact, questioning deepens devotion. The practice means creating space—perhaps in scheduled conversations—to ask the hard things together: "What am I learning about love through you?" "Are we becoming more alive together?" "What would we each need to feel truly chosen?" These are not threats but invitations into deeper knowing. The Interrogation of Love prevents relationships from becoming unconscious and stale. It treats love as worthy of the mind's most serious attention, not just the heart's comfort.
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