Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Surrender as Secure Attachment

The bhakti practice of surrender (saranagati) reframes vulnerability in relationships as strength, not weakness.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's famous surrender to Krishna—leaving her family and social position—demonstrates how true attachment involves releasing the need to control outcomes. In modern attachment theory, secure attachment paradoxically requires this same surrender: the ability to be vulnerable without demanding reassurance, to trust without needing guarantees. Saranagati, the Sanskrit term for complete surrender, doesn't mean losing oneself but rather aligning with something larger than ego's protective strategies. When choosing partners, this concept suggests that anxious attachment often masks a failure to surrender—we cling because we don't trust the process. Avoidant attachment represents the opposite extreme: refusing to surrender at all. Mirabai's example teaches that true partnership requires surrendering the illusion of control while maintaining spiritual sovereignty. This balance—vulnerable yet grounded, open yet self-possessed—characterizes the secure attachment style that makes healthy partnerships possible.

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Love & Relationships
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