Cultivate sahaja—spontaneous grace and naturalness—as a counterweight to anticipatory anxiety about futures beyond control.
Sahaja in bhakti means effortless presence, spontaneity grounded in surrender. Mirabai moved through dangerous, unstable circumstances with a quality of ease rooted not in naïveté but in deep trust. For those holding anticipatory grief about civilization, sahaja is the recognition that some things unfold beyond our control and perfection is not our responsibility. This does not mean passivity; rather, it means acting from clarity rather than compulsion, from love rather than fear. Sahaja acknowledges that we cannot engineer outcomes for a complex, chaotic world. When we release the burden of controlling the future, paradoxically, our present actions become more effective and our grief less totalizing. Sahaja teaches that ease and grief can coexist—we can remain tender and responsive without being rigid or desperate.
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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