The bhakti concept of unselfconscious naturalness as a response to anticipatory grief that bypasses both denial and trauma.
Sahaja in bhakti practice means functioning with natural spontaneity, without the self-consciousness or defensiveness that comes from fear. Mirabai danced, sang, and spoke with an undefended presence that scandalized her society but revealed her radical freedom. For those carrying anticipatory grief, sahaja offers a way through: not performing wellness, not dramatizing doom, but responding naturally to what is. This means sometimes laughing at the absurdity, sometimes weeping without justification, sometimes working with ordinary steadiness. It means trusting that the heart, when not defended, knows how to meet reality without fragmentation. Sahaja as a practice means gradually releasing the exhausting performance of normalcy and allowing a more authentic, unguarded response to emerge.
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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