Sangha is a circle of trusted witnesses who reflect your patterns back to you; in modern terms, this is conscious community that disrupts isolation-fueled attachment narratives.
Mirabai's devotion was always embedded in community—singing, dancing, celebrating with others. She understood that isolation amplifies attachment distortions. Sangha in a relationship context means creating a trusted circle—friends, mentors, therapists, teachers—who know your patterns and can offer perspective when you're caught. An anxious partner tends to hide their desperation and isolation; an avoidant partner isolates deliberately. Sangha disrupts both patterns through compassionate visibility. When you know others witness your relationship (without judgment), you're less likely to spiral into shame or denial. The sangha reflects reality: your partner is not your entire world, your anxiety is not the truth, your need for distance is not selflessness. This is not gossip but conscious accountability. Building sangha requires vulnerability and trust, but it provides the external stability that attachment-insecure individuals desperately need while they're learning to generate it internally.
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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