In bhakti, the divine has infinite names and forms; recognizing that your 'true self' is not singular but contains multiplicities, and you can hold multiple identities sequentially.
In bhakti philosophy, the divine is known by countless names—Krishna, Hari, Govinda, each name revealing different facets of the infinite. Mirabai knew the divine by many names, understanding that naming differently didn't contradict but enriched understanding. This principle dissolves the painful binary of 'true self versus false self' that intensifies identity grief. You weren't one true self that fractured; you contain multiplicities. The identity you lost was real and true within its context. The identity you're becoming is equally real and true. You can have been genuinely that person and be genuinely becoming someone else—these truths coexist. This framework prevents the self-recrimination that follows identity loss: 'Was I a fraud? Was any of it real?' The answer is yes to all versions. Hari's many names teaches that the divine (or your deepest self) expresses through multiple names, roles, and forms across time. You've lived many true identities. The grief comes from the specificity of form, not from discovering falseness. This multiplicity is your humanity, not your inauthenticity.
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