Mirabai's devotion wasn't obligatory but chosen continuously; secure attachment involves recommitting to partnership through conscious choice rather than obligation or fear.
Unlike arranged marriage or obligatory partnership, Mirabai's devotion to Krishna was radically voluntary and renewed through daily choice. She could have abandoned her path; instead, she chose it repeatedly despite hardship. This model transforms how we understand commitment in attachment. Insecure attachment often involves staying in relationships from fear (abandonment anxiety), obligation (guilt or duty), or hopelessness (avoidant numbing). Secure attachment involves genuinely choosing the relationship—not just at the beginning, but continuously, through conscious recommitment. Mirabai teaches that mature love is not passive acceptance of circumstances but active, ongoing choice. This doesn't mean relationships should feel effortless, but it does mean partners actively choose each other through difficulty rather than staying from compulsion. In partner selection, this reveals a crucial question: Am I choosing this person, or am I defaulting to them? Could I leave if I needed to, and do I stay because I genuinely want to? Secure attachment allows both partners to feel genuinely chosen rather than trapped or needed. Mirabai's model suggests that the strongest partnerships involve people free to leave but choosing daily to stay—a radical commitment rooted in love rather than fear.
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