Committing to a single devotional phrase or practice (eka mantra) as an anchor when anticipatory grief threatens to destabilize.
Eka mantra means one true phrase or practice—a commitment of singular focus. For Mirabai, it was her relationship with Krishna expressed through devotion. Eka mantra for anticipatory grief practice offers a simple, repeatable anchor: a phrase, a prayer, a gesture returned to when overwhelm arises. This might be "I am here," "I love what remains," or any authentic expression that reconnects you to presence and tenderness. The mantra is not denial but stabilization—a way to discharge the nervous system's overwhelm through repetition. Unlike positive affirmations that deny difficulty, eka mantra acknowledges reality while creating a steady point of return. Mirabai's devotion to Krishna was her eka mantra; it sustained her through exile, loss, and spiritual longing. For contemporary practitioners, choosing one true mantra creates resilience without dissociation.
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