Mirabai's radical openness to love coexists with unshakeable self-definition; healthy attachment requires both vulnerability and boundary.
Bhakti devotion requires complete surrender—opening oneself entirely to the beloved. Yet Mirabai's surrender was paradoxically accompanied by fierce self-definition; she surrendered her ego while protecting her authenticity and truth. This teaches a crucial distinction in attachment: the capacity to be vulnerable and open is not the same as the loss of self. Many people with anxious or avoidant attachment struggle with this balance—either merging completely into a partner (losing self in order to maintain connection) or rigidly maintaining boundaries (protecting self at the cost of genuine intimacy). Mirabai's example suggests that mature attachment requires holding both: the willingness to be touched and changed by another person, and the refusal to abandon one's own truth, values, or reality. This means being able to disagree with a partner without fearing abandonment, to maintain separate friendships and interests without guilt, and to say no without justifying or apologizing. Surrender without erasure creates a resilient attachment in which both people can be fully present.
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