Sahaj is the state of natural, unforced spontaneity; it teaches us to move through grief anniversaries with acceptance rather than resistance or forced positivity.
Sahaj means "easy" or "natural" in Sanskrit—a state of grace where effort dissolves and we flow with what is. Mirabai spoke of sahaj as the highest devotion: not striving, not performing, but genuine presence. Applied to grief anniversaries, sahaj invites us to release the exhausting work of pretending we're fine or forcing ourselves to "be strong." Instead, we allow the anniversary to move through us—to cry if tears come, to sing if joy surfaces, to sit in silence if that's what the day requires. Sahaj recognizes that triggering dates will affect us; there is no way around this. But by surrendering to what the day brings, without judgment or resistance, we paradoxically find ease. The examined heart in sahaj asks: "What does this grief need to be today?" and meets that need with simple presence.
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