Mirabai's intense longing for Krishna reveals the difference between authentic desire and anxious-preoccupied attachment patterns.
Mirabai's poetry overflows with longing—a yearning so fierce it moved her to abandon social convention. Yet her longing was never desperate or self-abandoning; it clarified her deepest truth. In attachment theory, anxious attachment often masquerades as intensity and passion, but it lacks this clarity of purpose. Mirabai's framework distinguishes between longing that illuminates who we are and need that obscures it. When choosing partners, this wisdom invites examining: Am I drawn to this person because they reflect my values and spiritual aspirations, or because I fear being alone? True longing, in Mirabai's tradition, sharpens awareness rather than clouds judgment. Her examined heart shows that authentic desire for partnership arises from wholeness, not from trying to fill internal voids. This bhakti perspective suggests that before committing, we should cultivate the capacity to long for a partner from a place of spiritual fullness rather than existential emptiness.
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