Distinguishing between love rooted in genuine connection and mutual growth versus love based on trading security, validation, or emotional labor.
Mirabai's devotion transcended all practical benefit—she received nothing material from her spiritual practice, no social advantage, no security. She loved Krishna not because it served her but because love itself was the point. This contrasts sharply with transactional attachment patterns, where partners are unconsciously chosen to provide specific emotional functions: the stable one who provides security, the exciting one who provides stimulation, the caretaker who provides purpose. These transactions feel like love but lack authentic resonance. When the transaction ends—when the partner can't provide what you need—resentment emerges. Mirabai teaches that genuine love involves transcendence of need-fulfillment. This doesn't mean ignoring your needs, but rather choosing partners because of who they are, not because of what they provide. This requires having met your own needs adequately before choosing: your own stability, your own stimulation, your own sense of purpose. From wholeness rather than hunger, you can love transcendently. This quality of love creates the paradoxical effect of more genuine mutuality and sustainable partnership.
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