Periagoge
Concept
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Smarana: Remembrance as Transformative Practice

The bhakti discipline of continuous remembrance of the divine beloved, a practice that retrains attention and cultivates agape through sustained focus on what is loved.

Mira
Why It Matters

Smarana—constant remembrance—was Mirabai's primary sadhana. She sang Krishna's names, recalled his deeds, dwelt mentally in his presence throughout the day and night. This was not mere nostalgia but active spiritual discipline that rewired her consciousness toward love. Smarana demonstrates that love is not spontaneous feeling alone but a cultivated capacity, built through deliberate practice of attention and remembrance. For agape across traditions, smarana offers a practical method: the cultivation of unconditional love toward others through sustained, deliberate remembrance of their inherent divinity or worth. When we practice remembering the humanity, struggles, and sacred dignity of those we find difficult, we gradually transform our capacity for agape. Smarana teaches that unconditional love requires training the mind's habitual grooves toward kindness. This framework honors that agape is both a gift of grace and a discipline of intentional practice, creating the conditions for love to flourish.

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