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Concept
1 min read

Love as Alchemical Transformation, Not Transaction

Mirabai's view of love as a transformative spiritual force rather than an exchange of needs reframes attachment beyond dependency models.

Mira
Why It Matters

In Mirabai's bhakti worldview, love is not a transaction—an exchange of emotional support, status, or material security—but rather an alchemical force that transforms the lover and beloved. This distinction proves crucial for understanding attachment patterns. Many insecure attachment styles operate within a transactional framework: I will be the perfect partner if you provide stability; I will demand constant reassurance if you withhold it; I will control to protect against abandonment. These patterns treat love as an exchange of goods, each party calculating their investment and return. Mirabai's alchemical model suggests something radical: that genuine attachment transforms both partners not through transaction but through witnessing and awakening. This means examining whether our partner selections and behaviors emerge from transactional thinking—seeking someone to complete us, rescue us, validate us—or from desire to be transformed together. Her example invites us to release scorekeeping and instead ask: does this relationship call forth my deepest self? Does it invite growth? Secure attachment, in this framework, requires moving beyond transaction into genuine mutuality and transformation.

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