Sahaj means 'natural' or 'effortless'—the bhakti understanding that losing your former identity wasn't a failure but a natural unfolding, like a flower opening its petals.
Sahaj in bhakti tradition refers to a state of natural, effortless being—and by extension, the natural falling away of false identities. Mirabai's renunciation wasn't forced or punitive; it emerged naturally from her devotion, like petals opening. When you grieve who you were, sahaj invites you to ask: was this loss truly traumatic, or was it the natural shedding of a self that no longer fit? This doesn't erase the pain—it reframes it. The self you've lost may have been constraining you, a cocoon you needed to leave. Sahaj teaches that some losses are not punishments but permissions. Your former identity may have been necessary once, but its dissolution may be equally necessary now. This perspective doesn't deny grief but contextualizes it within a larger natural process of becoming.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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