The bhakti principle of sahaja—natural, unforced responsiveness—as a way to act meaningfully without burnout or the illusion of control.
Sahaja means spontaneous, effortless, innate—the opposite of forced striving. In bhakti, it describes the devotee's natural response to divine grace, unmediated by ego-effort. For anticipatory grief about civilization, sahaja addresses a critical danger: the paralysis between two poles of false agency (believing we can control outcomes) and helplessness (believing nothing matters). Sahaja suggests a third way—aligned action that flows from genuine values rather than heroic fantasy. We respond to civilizational crisis not by martyring ourselves in unsustainable activism, but by acting in alignment with what we love and understand. Mirabai danced and sang not to save something but as natural expression. Applied here, sahaja means asking: What is my honest capacity? Where am I called? What can I sustain? This prevents anticipatory grief from becoming either performative activism or resigned inaction.
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