The spontaneous, non-forced emergence of openness and trust after grieving betrayal—not naïveté but matured discernment.
Sahaj in bhakti means "natural" or "spontaneous"—the state where devotion flows without effort, where surrender is no longer a choice but your nature. After affairs and broken trust, the question becomes: Can you rebuild openness without returning to blindness? Mirabai's tradition suggests yes, through a different mechanism. Sahaj is not the quick forgiveness that skips grief; it emerges only after the examined heart has done its work. You must fully feel the betrayal, name what was ignored or denied, and understand your own role in the dynamic. Only then can trust arise naturally—not as ideology or desperate hope, but as the spontaneous fruit of wisdom. This trust is paradoxically stronger because it includes clear sight of human fallibility. Sahaj means: I love you, and I see you. I remain open, and I maintain boundaries. I trust the process of learning, even if I cannot trust this person's behavior.
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