Sahaja means the natural, effortless state beyond effort; in recovery from betrayal, it names the gradual return to your own unshakeable center, independent of another's validation or presence.
Sahaja—the state of natural, spontaneous being—appears in Mirabai's later poetry as a condition of freedom she achieved through devotion. After years of longing, she became whole not by obtaining Krishna but by recognizing she was never separate from him. In the context of broken trust, sahaja is the eventual return to yourself—not to who you were before betrayal, but to a deeper, more grounded version of yourself. It emerges not through force or willpower but through the gradual dissolution of the false identities built around the relationship: the identity of the betrayed, the victim, the fool. Sahaja arrives when you stop trying to restore trust or meaning to the other person and instead remember your own completeness. This is not coldness; it is a warm, clear seeing. Mirabai's life teaches that sahaja takes time, but it is the natural fruition of examined heartbreak.
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