Pure devotional love that asks nothing of the beloved, modeling the paradoxical maturity of metta that holds without grasping.
Sudha-bhakti, or pure devotion, is love divorced from transaction. In Mirabai's relationship with Krishna, there is no bargaining—no promises made in exchange for grace, no withdrawal of love if the beloved fails to reciprocate. This bhakti principle illuminates a profound paradox in the Brahmaviharas: the most mature loving-kindness simultaneously loves completely and holds nothing. Sudha-bhakti teaches that in intimate relationships, the deepest freedom comes when we release the subtle demand that the other repay our love with the same intensity or form. This does not mean passivity or self-abandonment; rather, it means our love is not contingent on the other's response. When we practice sudha-bhakti in relationship, metta becomes genuinely unconditional, mudita celebrates the beloved's joy regardless of whether it includes us, and upekkha rests not in cold detachment but in the warm acceptance of reality as it is. Mirabai's examined heart shows that paradoxically, only when we release the need for return does love become whole.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.