The counterintuitive framework that releasing control and surrendering defensiveness paradoxically creates more secure, resilient bonds.
Bhakti tradition centers on surrender (sharanagati)—a complete opening to something beyond the ego's control. Mirabai exemplified this surrender, abandoning social status, family demands, and personal safety to follow her devotional calling. In contemporary attachment theory, anxious partners often over-control; avoidant partners over-defend. The paradox of surrender suggests that genuine security emerges not through controlling outcomes or armoring against hurt, but through willingness to be known, vulnerable, and changed by another person. This doesn't mean naive trust or accepting mistreatment; it means relinquishing the exhausting project of self-protection that ultimately prevents real intimacy. Mirabai's radical vulnerability—her public declarations of desire, her refusal to hide her unconventional choices—created a kind of unshakeable authenticity. When you surrender the need to appear "safe" or "acceptable" to a partner, you become paradoxically safer in the relationship because you're no longer performing. The other person knows you, and that knowing itself becomes the ground of security rather than a threat.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.