The Bhakti principle of naturalness and simplicity that strips away pretense from collective grief, enabling genuine human connection.
Sahaja—spontaneous, natural, simple—was central to Mirabai's rejection of ritualistic artifice. She sang plainly of her longing, used everyday language, and refused the ornate spirituality of formal religion. Applied to collective grief, sahaja invites communities to abandon performed mourning and return to simplicity. This means: sit together without speeches, share stories without curating them, cry without explaining the tears, hold silence without filling it. Sahaja creates space for authentic encounter across difference. When communities grieve together, the pressure to say the right thing, feel the right feeling, or display appropriate sorrow often blocks genuine connection. Simple presence—a hand held, a name spoken, tears shed—communicates what elaborate rhetoric cannot. Sahaja-based grief practices might be intentionally unstructured: community gatherings without agendas, rituals that repeat traditional forms without contemporary performance pressure. This simplicity paradoxically deepens collective mourning by removing barriers between raw human hearts.
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