Mirabai's honest acknowledgment of jealousy and possessiveness toward Krishna reveals that attachment patterns contain important information about our needs.
Mirabai's devotional poetry explicitly names her jealousy of Krishna's other devotees, her possessive desires, her wounded feelings when he seemed distant. Rather than condemning these emotions as spiritual impurity, she examined them as part of her authentic emotional landscape. This radical honesty about jealousy and possessiveness offers crucial insight for attachment work. Jealousy, often pathologized, is actually a messenger. It signals where we feel insecure, where we fear abandonment, where we need reassurance. Anxious attachment often manifests as jealousy; avoidant attachment as indifference. Neither is wrong—both are data. When choosing partners, our jealous impulses reveal important information: Do I trust this person? Do I fear losing them? Do I need more reassurance than they can provide? Mirabai's example suggests examining jealousy with curiosity rather than shame. What is it revealing about my needs? Can this partner meet those needs, or am I pursuing someone incapable of providing security? The authentic self acknowledges jealousy; the conscious self learns from it rather than being controlled by it.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.