Mirabai's orientation toward Krishna as an infinite, transcendent beloved—rather than a horizontal human equal—maps the neuroscience of falling into an explicitly spiritual vector.
Mirabai's beloved was not a person but a divine presence—vast, eternal, infinitely beyond her. This vertical orientation fundamentally changes the neurochemistry and phenomenology of falling in love. When you fall in love with a human, your brain's social bonding circuits activate with the expectation of mutual recognition, reciprocal attachment, security. With the vertical beloved, these expectations dissolve. There is no hope of possession, no possibility of merger into comfortable domesticity. Instead, there is pure longing, pure opening, pure surrender. Paradoxically, this neurochemical state—the activation of awe and transcendence networks in the brain rather than only pair-bonding circuits—may be more integrated with your larger self. Mirabai's examined heart, oriented toward the infinite, does not become contracted around one finite person. Yet she pours the full neurochemical intensity of falling into this vertical relationship. The framework suggests this: even in horizontal love with a human, you can maintain a vertical dimension—seeing in your beloved the infinite, the sacred, the inexplicable mystery. This preserves both the neurochemical intensity of attachment and the freedom and grief that comes from loving something larger than yourself.
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.