Sahaj means ease and spontaneity—the state where forgiveness arises naturally from practice rather than willful effort or performance.
Sahaj in bhakti philosophy describes the effortless state that emerges from sustained devotion. Applied to forgiveness, it counters the Western tendency to force reconciliation through willpower alone. Mirabai's poetry suggests that authentic forgiveness isn't achieved through gritting teeth but through repeated turning toward love until resentment loses its grip. Sahaj forgiveness arrives when you stop performing forgiveness and actually embody it—when you can think of the person without contraction in your chest. This requires patience and practice: meditation, journaling, honest conversation with trusted others. It acknowledges that some forgiveness takes years. Sahaj protects against toxic positivity—the demand to 'just forgive'—by recognizing that genuine forgiveness is a state you grow into, not a switch you flip. The practice matters more than the timeline.
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