Smaran is devotional remembrance that honors the full arc of who you've been; it transforms memory from a source of grief into a sacred practice.
Smaran means to remember or invoke in Sanskrit, and in bhakti it's a contemplative practice of recalling the divine through memory. Rather than trying to forget your former identity or escape the grief by looking only forward, smaran invites you to remember with reverence. This is different from nostalgia or rumination; it's a disciplined honoring of your own becoming. Smaran asks: What capacities emerged in that old identity? What did you learn? How did that self serve your evolution, even if you've moved beyond it? Mirabai's poems constantly invoke memory—of Krishna, of previous moments of grace—as a way to deepen presence. For your grief, smaran becomes a practice of receiving your former identity as part of your sacred journey. You acknowledge the gifts it gave you, the protections it offered, the functions it served. Memory becomes an altar where you can honor what was without being imprisoned by it. Through smaran, grief softens into gratitude for a self that served you exactly as long as you needed it.
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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