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Likhit Japa is a meditative writing practice book designed for conscious mantra chanting.
With 108 thoughtfully designed pages, 120 GSM thick paper, and a premium hardcover with gold detailing, it turns mantra writing into a calming daily ritual.
Open to all mantras – Ram, Radhe, Shiva, Sai, or any you follow – this book lays flat and supports deep focus, presence, and inner stillness.
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Some practices are spoken.
Some are remembered.
Likhit Japa is written – slowly, consciously, devotionally.
This book is not just for writing mantras.
It is for settling the mind, anchoring the breath, and allowing devotion to flow through your hands.
Designed with deep intention, Likhit Japa invites you to experience mantra writing as a meditation, not a task.
When you write a mantra repeatedly, something shifts.
The mind quietens
The body slows down
The mantra moves from paper → awareness → being
Writing engages your mind, hand, and heart together, helping the mantra stay with you long after the practice ends.
This is a universal Likhit Japa book, open to all forms of written chanting:
Ram Ram
Radhe Radhe
Om Namah Shivaya
Sai Ram
Gayatri Mantra
Or any mantra your heart is drawn to
No rules. No limitations.
One sacred space for all mantras.
108 dedicated Likhit Japa pages
– thoughtfully chosen to honour the sacred rhythm of 108
Multiple page styles
– to help you stay present, mindful, and deeply engaged
– encouraging full internalisation of every written chant
120 GSM premium thick paper
– smooth, calming to write on
– no ink bleed, no distractions
Thick hardcover with gold leaf detailing
– feels like a sacred object, not just a notebook
Gold wire-o binding
– strong, elegant, and durable
– lays completely flat, allowing effortless, uninterrupted practice
Minimal, calming design
– nothing loud, nothing overwhelming
– so the focus stays on you and the mantra
More grounded
Less restless
Spiritually anchored
Emotionally calm
Gently disciplined
Deeply connected to your practice
Even 5–10 minutes a day can become a sacred pause you begin to crave.
Anyone seeking calm without complexity
Those who struggle with noisy thoughts during meditation
Devotees who want a tangible spiritual practice
Beginners and long-time practitioners alike
Anyone who believes faith grows through consistency, not force
It is a practice you return to.
A ritual you build.
A stillness you carry.
Because it slows you down – naturally
Writing mantras calms the mind without effort or force.
Because it works for any mantra you believe in
One book, many mantras. Your devotion decides.
Because it feels sacred, not ordinary
From the gold details to the thick pages, every touch feels intentional.
Because it helps you stay consistent
Different page styles keep your practice engaging and mindful.
Because it lies flat and lets you flow
No holding, no adjusting – just uninterrupted writing.
Because it becomes your personal ritual
Over time, these pages hold your prayers, focus, and quiet moments.
| Quantity | 1 Pack, 2 Pack, 5 Pack, 10 Pack |
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Tejaswani –
It helped me create a small but powerful daily ritual. The pages are thick and premium – I love writing in this book.
Priya –
The paper, the cover, the design – everything feels intentional and devotional. Such a calming practice and it’s been helping me a lot.
Rashmi –
Likhit japa helped me build a more personal connection with my faith. 🙏 I keep this book with me to write Ram Naam daily
Ashna –
I didn’t expect such calm from something so simple. Yet it’s so powerful. This book gives me a space to write God’s name and feel peaceful. Thank you for such a high quality experience
Alka Rathi (verified owner) –
Likhit Japa is one of the best things I have ever bought for me.
The quality is premium. Pages are thick and smooth to write on.
I Really love writing in it.
Arya Jindal –
I started this journal unsure about written chanting—uncertain how writing words instead of speaking them could carry any real power. At first, it felt unfamiliar, almost mechanical. But as I stayed with it, something shifted. The repetition slowed my mind, the words began to settle, and the act of writing turned meditative. What surprised me most was the depth of focus it created. By the end, the practice felt grounding, intimate, and quietly awe-inspiring—less about the words on the page, more about the stillness they uncovered.