Naam japa is the devotional practice of repeating the divine name; it becomes a container for grief, allowing repeated expression and gradual integration of loss.
Mirabai engaged in naam japa—the continuous repetition of Krishna's names and attributes—as her primary spiritual practice. This repetition was not mechanical but ecstatic, embodied, and emotionally saturated. In grief work, japa offers a practical structure for processing overwhelming feeling. Repetition—whether through journaling the same loss repeatedly, singing or speaking a name, or creating variations on a theme—helps integrate trauma and sorrow. The practice of japa acknowledges that grief does not resolve in a single catharsis but requires returning again and again. Each repetition adds a layer; the repeated action becomes a groove the psyche can follow. Creatively, japa translates into practices like writing the same loss from multiple angles, creating visual variations on a theme, or returning to a motif across time. The repetition sanctifies the grief; it says this loss matters enough to speak again and again. Over time, the raw edge softens without disappearing. The practice becomes both container and transformation.
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