Sahaj means effortless ease and naturalness; it frames grief for lost identity as part of life's organic unfolding rather than a rupture to resist.
Sahaj refers to a state of natural, effortless ease—flowing with reality as it is rather than resisting what cannot be changed. In Mirabai's tradition, sahaj is the surrender to life's inevitable transformations. Your identity has changed; sahaj teaches you to stop struggling against this fact. Mirabai left her palace, her marriage, her caste—not through violent rejection but through gradual, natural movement toward what was true for her. Grief for lost identity often stems from the exhausting effort to preserve who we were. Sahaj invites you to release that effort. This doesn't mean apathy; it means grieving with the flow of life rather than against it. By practicing sahaj, you acknowledge that identities are temporary vessels, and their dissolution is as natural as seasons changing. This framework helps you grieve without bitterness, honoring your past self while allowing natural evolution.
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