Mirabai's practice of claiming authentic desire and feeling through direct inquiry, enabling partners to recognize and honor their true attachment needs versus internalized should.
Nija-pada means one's own place, one's authentic ground—Mirabai's emphatic claim to her own heart and desire. She famously rejected her husband's family's demands by asserting her own reality: her love belongs to Krishna, not to conventional marriage. This was radical honesty in a context of extreme pressure. In modern attachment patterns, many people are alienated from their true needs. Anxious partners often abandon their own nija-pada to merge with partners; avoidant partners protect their nija-pada through distance, assuming autonomy requires isolation. Mirabai's practice suggests a third way: fierce clarity about your own heart, combined with genuine openness to love. Examining the heart means asking: What do I actually need in relationship? What am I pretending to need because of family, culture, or fear? What are my authentic desires, not my automatic reactions? By returning to nija-pada—your own ground—you can relate from wholeness rather than compulsion. This doesn't mean selfishness; it means loving from authenticity, knowing when to say yes and when to say no with equal clarity.
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