Cultivating peaceful, grounded devotion (sahaja rasa) rather than only passionate or turbulent attachment styles.
While Mirabai's love for Krishna burned with passion and viraham, bhakti tradition recognizes sahaja rasa—a peaceful, grounded devotion that feels like coming home. This rasa represents mature attachment: not the fireworks of new romance or the desperation of anxious clinging, but a steady, nurturing presence. Many attachment theories focus on early patterns (anxious, avoidant, secure) but don't address the possibility of actually cultivating this peaceful essence through practice. Sahaja rasa attachment means choosing and nurturing relationships where you feel fundamentally safe, understood, and at ease—not exciting but alive, not dramatic but deeply real. This doesn't dismiss passion, but contextualizes it within a larger frame of peaceful communion. When selecting partners, this concept suggests noticing whether you're drawn primarily to intensity and drama, or whether you can recognize and value someone whose presence feels grounding. It also invites you to develop sahaja rasa within yourself—the peaceful devotion to your own truth—so you choose from wholeness rather than longing for someone to complete you.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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