The bhakti concept of effortless surrender, allowing grief and acceptance to coexist without struggle.
Sahaj means natural ease or spontaneous flow—a state where spiritual practice becomes transparent, where surrender happens without forcing. Mirabai spoke of sahaj as the goal of bhakti: not rigid discipline but genuine, unselfconscious devotion. Applied to anticipatory grief, sahaj suggests a different relationship to acceptance. You need not force yourself to 'be okay' with the coming loss, nor must you fight it with false hope. Instead, sahaj invites you into a third space: can you let grief and continued loving coexist naturally? Can you grieve what is not yet gone and simultaneously meet the person as they are now? This requires releasing the exhausting effort to control your emotional state. Mirabai's freedom came not from forcing happiness but from surrendering the need to manage her heart. For you, sahaj means: stop trying to prepare perfectly, stop monitoring your readiness. Let the messy, contradictory feelings be exactly as they are. This natural ease paradoxically makes room for deeper connection than all your bracing can achieve.
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