Vismarana means forgetting in service of freedom—the deliberate releasing of attachment to a past self, mourned and then consciously released.
Vismarana, the deliberate forgetting celebrated in some bhakti texts, operates differently than repression; it is conscious, grief-informed release. Mirabai's renunciation involved forgetting her duties as queen—not denying they happened but releasing emotional grip. When you grieve a lost identity, vismarana becomes a two-stage practice: first, fully remember and mourn what was. Then, consciously practice forgetting—not erasure but release of possession. The lost identity was real; your attachment to maintaining its story is what causes prolonged suffering. This doesn't mean pretending the past didn't shape you, but rather graduating from "this is who I am" to "this is what formed me." Vismarana is the grieving work of saying goodbye not once but repeatedly, each time loosening the grip slightly more. It is a liberation practice because what you grieve deeply, you can finally release genuinely.
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