Natural, unselfconscious creativity that arises when technique dissolves and authentic presence emerges.
Sahaja means "natural" or "effortless"—the state where practice becomes spontaneous, where knowledge flows without deliberation. In bhakti, it describes the saint who has surrendered so completely that divine love expresses through them without intermediary. Mirabai's poetry exemplifies sahaja: seemingly simple yet infinitely resonant, arising from such deep devotion that artifice falls away. For Love & Creativity, sahaja is the coveted state where a musician plays without self-consciousness, a writer writes without editing the first draft, a lover responds without defensive strategy. It's not laziness but the fruit of deep practice that has become embodied. Sahaja emerges when we stop trying to be creative and allow creativity to move through us. This requires releasing the need to appear profound, clever, or original. It demands trust in what wants to emerge. How much of your creative struggle stems from trying rather than allowing? What happens when you create as naturally as you breathe?
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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