Sahaja is natural, spontaneous authenticity without pretense; it teaches that the most loving communication requires releasing performative layers and speaking from genuine self.
Sahaja, meaning natural or spontaneous, describes the state Mirabai cultivated where her love for Krishna flowed without artifice or calculation. She abandoned court life, social standing, and family expectations to speak and act from unfiltered devotion. For communication in love, sahaja represents the end-goal of the examined heart: reaching a place where you speak your truth without strategic filtering, where words flow from genuine feeling rather than learned scripts. This doesn't mean unfiltered emotional dumping, but rather communication that emerges from authentic self-knowledge rather than fear-based performance. Many people in relationships communicate through layers of protection—saying what they think they should say, hiding what might upset the other, maintaining an image. Sahaja requires stripping these away. It means telling your partner what you actually feel, not what sounds acceptable. Mirabai's fearlessness in her devotional expression shows that sahaja communication, grounded in self-examination, creates the safety and intimacy that performative communication cannot. It is the freedom of being fully known.
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