Mirabai's metaphor of the heart melting in love describes the dissolution of defensive armor that enables genuine intimacy.
Throughout her poetry, Mirabai describes her heart melting, dissolving, breaking open in devotion to Krishna. The melting heart is not weakness but the surrender of protective armor that kept her defended and isolated. Insecure attachment patterns—anxious, avoidant, disorganized—all involve some form of defensive hardening. The anxious person hardens against the fear of abandonment by clinging; the avoidant person hardens against vulnerability by fleeing; the disorganized person alternates between these rigid states. The examined heart recognizes these defenses as once-necessary survival strategies that no longer serve. Mirabai's melting describes the gradual softening that occurs as we feel truly seen and accepted. In secure relationships, both partners practice vulnerability: they share fears, grief, and shame without being weaponized against them. The melting heart requires safety—evidence over time that one's partner won't exploit vulnerability. As trust deepens, the defensive structures relax. The heart becomes porous, responsive, alive. This is not regression to childhood neediness but mature interdependence.
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