Sahaja—naturalness, ease—emerges when grief and creativity become so integrated they flow without forced effort, when making from loss becomes simply how you live.
Sahaja in bhakti refers to the state where spiritual practice becomes natural, no longer effortful or separate from ordinary life. For Mirabai, her dancing, singing, and devotion were not performances superimposed on life but life itself. For the creator grieving, sahaja is the hard-won integration where sorrow and creativity are no longer at odds but seamlessly woven. You stop fighting your grief, stop trying to escape it in your work, stop treating it as an obstacle to overcome. Instead, it becomes the texture of how you think, perceive, and make. The work flows from this integrated wholeness rather than from willful effort. This does not mean constant sadness; rather, it means the sadness has been digested and transmuted into wisdom, depth, and authentic presence. When sahaja arrives, you create not despite your loss but because of it, with an ease that astonishes you. It is the reward of long practice.
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