Sahaj is the state of natural, unforced authenticity that emerges when loss strips away pretense and allows genuine expression to flow.
Sahaj means spontaneous, easy, and natural—a state beyond effort or artifice. For Mirabai, this was the space where her most authentic devotional voice could sing, freed from social constraint and expectation. In grief and creativity, sahaj describes the paradoxical ease that arrives after shattering: when loss has dismantled our defenses, we discover an unexpected simplicity in expression. The pretenses we carried—to be composed, successful, unbroken—fall away, and what remains is raw, unguarded truth. This is not passivity but a fierce authenticity that requires surrendering the need to perform or control. Mirabai's radical disregard for caste and propriety in pursuit of her devotion exemplifies sahaj—the freedom that comes from having nothing left to lose. In creative work born from grief, sahaj is the quality of unavoidable honesty, the work that could only come from this particular breaking.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.