Sahaja means spontaneous or natural arising—a state where you move without the old identity's scripts, yet without forcing artificial new ones; genuine emergence from grief.
A central bhakti goal is sahaja—not enlightenment as distant heaven, but the natural spontaneous arising of authentic presence without pretense or calculation. Mirabai danced, sang, and loved without the formal protocols her birth demanded, embodying sahaja devotion. For identity grief, sahaja represents the goal: a state where you no longer perform your old self consciously, nor do you strain to perform a new identity. You simply arise. This is not numb numbness or dissociation, but a relaxation into genuine responsiveness. The path to sahaja requires grieving fully—you cannot skip past the loss into false spontaneity. But when grief is metabolized rather than repressed, spontaneity returns naturally. You speak without rehearsal. You move without checking the old script. You make choices from authentic response rather than either habit or desperate novelty. Sahaja is the proof that grief has completed its work: your old identity is fully mourned, and your new being flows without friction.
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