The bhakti concept of prema redefines love as devotional practice focused on the beloved's reality, not ownership or control.
In bhakti tradition, prema is love stripped of ego, possession, and expectation. Mirabai's love for Krishna was not about having him, changing him, or being recognized—it was pure devotion to his existence as he was. This radical reframing transforms attachment from a need-based pattern into a practice of honoring another person's autonomy and truth. Anxious attachment often seeks reassurance and merger; avoidant attachment creates distance through control. Prema offers a third way: love as witnessing, serving, and celebrating the other without requiring them to complete you. In choosing partners, ask: Can I love this person as they actually are, not as I need them to be? Can I support their freedom even when it distances us? Prema doesn't mean passive acceptance of harm—it means choosing love consciously, repeatedly, and without demanding that the other person fix your wounds. This transforms attachment from compulsion into devotional practice.
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