
Variations on Imiaslavie 🪰
Jul 09, 2025
Here’s a way I’ve been playing with this practice.
I shift the “me” that I’m asking mercy for (from my heart), when I say “have mercy on me” to be wildly more inclusive than my particular body-mind-character-
- “me” including whoever I’m judging or mad at
- “me” including whoever I’m speaking with or looking at
- “me” including all of humanity, or a people, or a country, or a world leader (especially one I judge)
- “me” including all plants, animals, and living creatures—a bug in my house for example
I think the “including” part is really important. I’m not praying for these beings as separate from me, but rather as extensions of me, or expansions of who I identify with. If this doesn’t make sense, a place you might want to start is with your family, especially if you’re a parent of young children.
I want to honor the lineage and centuries of practice by noting that I may be totally butchering the practice and theology. Although I believe it reflects the view of Gregory Palamas; a 13th century saint famous for defending hesychast spirituality, I haven’t run this by any practitioners or been advised by anyone else doing this practice. Nevertheless I share it because I believe it’ll be asymmetrically positive, and, especially with this caveat, I believe in the value of our civilization experimenting and adapting practices from a variety of ancient and time-prove lineages that are good for all.
With love, Jordan
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