Mirabai's renunciation of worldly marriage paradoxically enabled deeper love; learning what to release creates space for authentic, non-desperate attachment.
Mirabai's refusal of marriage was often read as rejection of earthly love, but it was actually an act of selective focus: she released one form of attachment (social marriage) to pursue deeper devotion. This teaches that secure attachment requires strategic renunciation—letting go of certain desires, expectations, or relationships to make space for genuine connection. Many people remain in anxious or avoidant patterns because they're unwilling to renounce the fantasy of the "perfect partner" who will finally complete them. They cling to the hope that the unavailable person will change, or they cycle through partners seeking the one who won't hurt them. Renunciation means consciously releasing these fantasies. It means walking away from relationships that don't serve your growth. It means renouncing the need to be rescued or the fantasy that love should be effortless. This clearing of clutter—what Mirabai's spiritual path entailed—allows genuine attachment to emerge. In choosing partners, renounce the non-negotiables: the need to fix someone, the fantasy of completion, the belief that someone else's love determines your worth. What remains after this clearing is the capacity for authentic, reciprocal connection.
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