The state of effortless acceptance and ease that comes from releasing resistance to mortality and impermanence.
Sahaja means innate, spontaneous, without effort—a state where the heart stops fighting reality and flows with it. In bhakti, sahaja emerges when the soul accepts its smallness before the infinite. Anticipatory grief often traps us in resistance: we fight the approaching loss, bargain with time, demand exceptions. Sahaja invites a different posture—not passive resignation, but active acceptance. This is the wisdom of the examined heart that Mirabai cultivated: seeing clearly that all beings are temporary, that love does not require permanence to be real, that freedom comes from releasing the demand that things stay as they are. Sahaja is not numbness; it is the paradoxical peace that arises when we stop struggling against the tide.
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