The bhakti ideal of mutual recognition and attention as a foundation for secure partnership connection.
Though Mirabai's devotion was to the divine, her poetry reveals the essential bhakti principle of witness: being fully seen and known by the beloved. This concept translates to partnership as reciprocal attention and recognition. Anxious attachment often manifests as one-sided focusing—monitoring the other person while feeling unseen. Avoidant attachment involves emotional distance and unwillingness to be known. The examined heart in Mirabai's tradition seeks something different: partners who genuinely witness each other, who are present to each other's complexity, grief, and growth. This doesn't require perfect harmony; it requires sustained attention and recognition. Can this person see you? Can you see them? Are you both willing to be known? These become essential questions in attachment evaluation. Mirabai's intense presence with the divine—her full emotional availability and honesty—models what secure partnership requires: partners who show up fully, who don't need you to be different, and who allow themselves to be truly known in return. This mutual witness creates the safety that secure attachment requires.
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