A paradoxical state of full engagement with civilizational challenges that arises from released resistance and absorbed grief.
Sahaj, in bhakti tradition, means the natural, effortless state that emerges when the separate self dissolves into service. Mirabai's actions—her dancing, her poetry, her defiance of caste and gender norms—flowed from this groundedness rather than from willful forcing. For anticipatory grief about civilization, sahaj offers an alternative to both frenetic activism-as-denial and paralyzed despair. When we fully feel and metabolize our grief about civilizational futures, something shifts: action becomes possible from rest rather than panic. Sahaj is what occurs when we stop demanding that our efforts guarantee outcomes, when we accept systemic complexity as given rather than personal failure. The examined heart moving through genuine grief can access sahaj—a state of clear-eyed, unhurried responsiveness. This is not passivity; it is the deepest agency. It allows us to work on multiple timescales simultaneously: immediate care, long-term structures, and released attachment to control. Sahaj transforms anticipatory grief into sustainable presence.
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