Japa Transformations


Book Description

"...I pray that You will stay by me and protect me and save me. " The best way for me to assure myself of Your company and protection is to chant Your names. I ask You to please remind me to regularly chant and to do so in a humble state of mind, keeping myself lower than a blade of grass, more tolerant than a tree, and ready to offer all respect to others without expection any honor for myself. "--Page 4 of cover.




Nama Japa


Book Description

Comparative study of the Hindu and Christian traditions.




108 Japa Poems


Book Description




Japa (Mantra Yoga)


Book Description

The tradition of Japa in India dates back to the ancient times of the Rishis of the Veda. What is Japa? Japa is the repetition of a Mantra, a potent syllable or syllables, a word or combination of words, done with the object of realizing the truth embodied in the Mantra.




Japa and Other Stories


Book Description

These eight brutally beautiful stories are struck full of fragmented dreams, with highly developed thieves, misadventurers, and displaced characters all heaving through a human struggle to anchor themselves in a new home or sometimes a new reality. This book is about young Nigerian immigrants who bilocate, trek through the desert, become temporary Mormons, sneak through Russia, and yearn for new life in strange new territories that force them to confront what it means to search for a connection far from home. Japa and Other Stories came out of a struggle Iheoma Nwachukwu faced when trying to orient himself in the United States of 2017 to 2021, when attitudes toward immigrants suddenly shifted. The Japa characters explored in this book are immigrants who have no plans to return to their home country—for voluntary reasons—although they retain a strong connection to home.




Japa Reform Notebook


Book Description

Japa Reform Notebook – “It is essential that everyone fulfil a specific vow to chant the Hare Krishna Mantra. Therefore, we have prescribed in our society that all our students must chant at least sixteen rounds daily. Such chanting must be offenseless in order to be of high quality. Mechanical chantign is not as powerful as chanting name without offences.” Caitanya Caritamrta Adi lila 10.43 Purport




Japa Walks, Japa Talks


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Japa


Book Description

Bhurijana has mined nine jewels from the Siksastakam that he uses to teach japa retreats. Each one will help a chanter unlock the treasures of Krsna's holy names. Which jewel a person will find most useful will depend on the quality of japa he or she is chanting at the moment. Drawing from sources such as Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu, Bhajana Rahasya and others, Bhurijana Prabhu gives an edifying look at chanting Japa. This edition also includes a Vrndavana Meditations desk-top booklet with spiral binding on the top and a cardboard fold-out that allows it to sit on a flat surface. The booklet contains 18 beautiful photos and meditations on Vrindavana by Bhurijana dasa.




Japa Yoga


Book Description




My Life in Theory


Book Description

This is a rare autobiographical history written from the center of the inner circle of psychoanalysis. Today, only a few psychoanalysts remain who have Dr. Rangell's unique, insider's view of the last half century of psychoanalytic history. His close associations with the major contributors to theory during this time permit him to chronicle the constant marriage of people and ideas that has been the hallmark of the psychoanalytic community over the previous decades. His insights are enhanced by his leadership role across the spectrum of psychoanalytic organizations (local, national, and international) that has allowed him to witness and participate in the great debates of our time. Written as Dr. Rangell approached the age of 90, this chronicle possesses the same clarity and incisiveness that has always characterized Rangell's writing. He is still the tough-minded thinker ready to challenge the fuzzy thinking that threatens to split psychoanalysis into factions. In this work, Dr. Rangell gives us his valuable perspective on the significant individuals in psychoanalysis and their ideas: from the early dissension of the 20s and 30s to the war years, to the "golden years" of the 50s and early 60s where complications in the field manifested in the splitting of Institutes. He goes on to cover the turmoil surrounding the theoretical debates of the 70s, followed by his look at the attempt at pluralism in the 80s, the eclecticism of the 90s, and finishing with a discussion of the discipline as it is now. Then, using his own prodigious contributions to the great debates of our time, Dr. Rangell fuses divisive views into a unitary theory of psychoanalysis. This composite theory offers an amalgamated view that provides coherence in place of the fragmentation, personal warring, and disarray that constitutes the present state of psychoanalysis.