Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Naam Smaran: Presence Through Sacred Repetition

The bhakti practice of repeating the divine name as anchor for presence, offering a embodied method for stabilizing metta and compassion.

Mira
Why It Matters

Naam smaran—remembrance of the divine name through repetition—is a foundational bhakti practice. Mirabai sang the name of Krishna continuously, sometimes literally dozens of times in a single verse. This is not rote memorization but an embodied practice of presence: the repetition anchors awareness in the heart, steadies the mind, and keeps consciousness turned toward what matters most. Buddhist loving-kindness practice similarly relies on repetition and anchoring phrases. Yet naam smaran adds a devotional dimension: the name carries relational presence, the sense of calling out and being heard. In relationships, naam smaran teaches that presence is not passive but active, not abstract but embodied. When we are with someone, we can silently anchor ourselves in the practice—perhaps repeating intentions of metta or compassion—to prevent our attention from fragmenting into reactivity or self-concern. For practitioners new to Brahmaviharas, the rhythm and musicality of naam smaran (or mantra-like repetition) can be more accessible than abstract meditation. The practice works through the body and breath, not just thought. In relationships, this embodied practice prevents brahmaviharas from becoming merely intellectual; they become felt, lived, present in the body and voice.

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