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Concept
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Sahaja: Graceful Integration

The state of natural, effortless integration where grief becomes woven into daily life without dominating it.

Mira
Why It Matters

Sahaja means "natural" or "effortless," the state where spiritual practice becomes spontaneous rather than forced. Applied to grief across decades, it describes the point where loss is no longer something we *do* but something we *are*. In early grief, awareness of loss is constant and exhausting; we must consciously remember to breathe, eat, move. Across years, grief integrates into the self's deeper layers. We no longer introduce ourselves as "grieving"; grief becomes part of our unspoken depth. Mirabai achieved sahaja—her devotion was not separate from her breath, but indistinguishable from it. Similarly, the examined heart eventually reaches a state where the beloved's absence is neither forgotten nor actively mourned, but simply *known*. Grief remains but stops demanding center stage. Sadness might arise in unexpected moments, but it no longer defines every hour. Sahaja suggests that grief's endpoint (if there is one) is not forgetting or full happiness, but integration so complete that loss becomes invisible, present in everything we do.

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