Bhakti distinguishes between the purifying ache of genuine longing and the contracted fear of clinging—essential for healthy love boundaries.
Mirabai longed for Krishna with an intensity that shaped every moment. This longing was not neediness; it was the vital force of her soul reaching toward what it loved. Yet bhakti teaches a crucial distinction: longing purifies, while clinging contracts. Clinging is rooted in fear of abandonment, unworthiness, or the belief that you cannot survive without another person. Longing is rooted in love itself—it's generous, open, and doesn't require the other person to complete you. In the context of boundaries in love, this distinction is critical. You can long for someone while maintaining healthy boundaries. You can miss them while respecting their autonomy. But clinging often disguises itself as love, leading you to compromise boundaries out of fear. You might tell yourself you're being loving when you're actually being controlling or demanding. Mirabai teaches that true longing doesn't despise; it opens. It doesn't grasp; it reaches. When you're clinging, you're often violating boundaries—your own and others'. When you're longing, you can honor distance and freedom while your love remains alive and vital.
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