The natural, effortless acceptance of what is, releasing resistance to pain and allowing grief to flow through without forcing resolution.
Sahaj means natural ease or spontaneity—doing what is true without strain or pretense. Mirabai lived sahaj; she did not perform devotion but embodied it. In grief support, sahaj is the opposite of the common impulse to "be strong" or "stay positive." It invites the grieving person to stop resisting their authentic response and instead allow it to move through them naturally. This might mean crying without apology, sitting in silence without filling it, or expressing anger without justifying it. When you support someone with sahaj, you model this ease yourself—you don't tense around their pain, don't try to steer them toward a predetermined "healthy" grieving timeline. You create space for their process to unfold organically. Mirabai danced, sang, and wept in public without concern for propriety; she honored her natural response to her love for Krishna. Sahaj teaches that grief needs permission to be exactly what it is, not managed or controlled.
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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