Recognizing and moving through projection onto partners toward seeing them as they actually are, as Mirabai's devotion matured beyond fantasy.
Early in her devotion, Mirabai may have idealized Krishna—projecting onto him her longing, her wounds, her spiritual aspirations. Yet her poetry shows a maturation: she came to see Krishna as he actually was, to love him through disillusionment and continued longing. This mirrors attachment psychology's understanding of transference. We initially project onto partners based on our attachment history, our parental imprints, our unmet needs. Anxiously attached people often idealize partners, seeing only their strengths until inevitable disillusionment creates crisis. Avoidant people dismiss partners early, protecting against transference through emotional distance. Secure people move through transference consciously. They begin with projection but gradually see their partner's actual humanity—flaws, limitations, and authentic beauty. Mirabai's mature devotion shows this arc: from seeking the perfect beloved to loving the real, imperfect divine presence. In choosing partners and sustaining attachment, this concept invites asking regularly: Am I loving who this person actually is, or who I need them to be? Can I see their limitations without abandoning the relationship? Can they see mine? Transference never fully disappears; secure attachment means noticing it and choosing real connection anyway.
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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