Hari-naam japa is the repetitive invocation of the divine name; applied to identity grief, it's a practice of naming and claiming your authentic self beyond lost roles.
In Mirabai's practice, japa—repetitive chanting of the divine name—became a way to anchor consciousness in what is real and eternal, beyond fleeting social positions. Adapted for identity grief, this practice invites you to identify and repeatedly invoke the name or quality that represents your truest self. This might be a quality ('compassion,' 'seeker,' 'learner') rather than a role. The practice of naming and claiming this repeatedly—in meditation, journal writing, or quiet repetition—creates a new neural pathway, a counter-narrative to the story of lost identity. Japa's power lies in its rhythm and repetition: it gradually shifts your sense of self from what you've lost to what persists, from external definition to internal knowing.
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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