Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Love Songs as Honest Communication

Using Mirabai's vulnerable poetry as a model for honest, creative expression of needs and feelings within intimate partnerships.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's revolutionary act was singing her truth publicly—her longing, her defiance, her sorrow, her ecstasy. She did not perform the role expected of a widow but expressed her authentic inner life through art. This models a crucial attachment skill: honest communication that is both vulnerable and artful. Many insecurely attached people either suppress their feelings entirely (avoidant) or explosively discharge them without nuance (anxious). True communication, as Mirabai demonstrates, requires finding language—or song, dance, poetry—that expresses what you feel without blame or demand. Instead of "You always leave me," the bhakti approach might be "I feel the absence between us and it breaks my heart." Instead of "I don't need you," it might be "I'm learning to be whole while still wanting you deeply." This concept suggests that creative expression—journaling, art-making, music—can unlock communication that ordinary speech cannot. Your partner may hear your song when they cannot hear your complaint. Moreover, singing your truth aloud (even privately) returns you to your own ground rather than making the other responsible for understanding. Mirabai's love songs ultimately were not for Krishna's ear but for her own soul's liberation.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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