Effortless wisdom and natural response arising from deep practice, as a guide for adaptive action in civilization's transition.
Sahaja in bhakti means natural, effortless spontaneity—wisdom that flows from deep practice until it becomes second nature. Mirabai's responses—her songs, her refusals, her compassion—emerged from years of surrendered devotion. She didn't calculate; she responded from an integrated wholeness. For anticipatory grief and civilizational response, sahaja becomes the goal: to practice presence and truth-telling so deeply that wise action becomes spontaneous. This is distinct from mere reaction. It emerges from prepared consciousness. By developing practices now—meditation, community, art, honest conversation—we're training the nervous system and psyche to respond with wisdom rather than panic or denial when crisis intensifies. Mirabai's model suggests that our most important work is inner preparation, deepening our capacity for undivided presence so that when we're called to respond, we can do so with clarity and grace.
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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