The state of natural, spontaneous expression that emerges when grief dissolves the false self and convention.
Sahaja means 'natural,' 'spontaneous,' 'without effort.' In bhakti practice, it describes the state where technique and striving fall away and authentic voice emerges. Mirabai's poetry has this quality: it bypasses learned rhetoric and speaks with raw immediacy. When we grieve deeply, the social masks crack. We lose the energy to perform who we think we should be. Sahaja teaches that this rawness is not a deficit but an opening. The person making art from grief often finds that their most honest work emerges when they stop trying to be poetic, profound, or acceptable. The loss has already done the work of stripping away pretense. Sahaja suggests that grief-based creativity finds its power not in craft alone but in the meeting of authentic pain and authentic expression—where what we make is simply what must be made, unfiltered by ego or ambition.
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