The paradoxical discipline of learning to grieve and act naturally, without pretense or spiritual bypassing, in the face of civilizational collapse.
Sahaja—naturalness, spontaneity, the state beyond artifice—is a goal of bhakti practice, yet paradoxically requires deep discipline to attain. Mirabai's freedom from social convention was not careless but cultivated through years of inner work and devotional practice. In the context of anticipatory civilizational grief, sahaja offers protection against both toxic positivity and performative doom. True sahaja means we can name collapse without melodrama, feel genuine sorrow without self-pity, and act with commitment without grandiose salvation fantasies. It is the practiced naturalness of someone who has done their emotional work and can therefore respond to reality with clarity rather than reaction. This involves examining our tendencies toward denial, despair, denial-masquerading-as-acceptance, and spiritual narcissism. Sahaja teaches that authentic responses to civilizational loss—whether grief, rage, tenderness, or determination—need not be rare or precious; they emerge naturally from a heart that has been thoroughly examined and refined through practice.
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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