The Quiet Return of Healing Music, and How Meghna Siraj Is Using Bhajans as an Emotional Anchor

At a time when conversations around emotional wellbeing are becoming increasingly central to everyday life, music that offers stillness, familiarity, and emotional grounding is finding renewed significance. Across age groups, there is a visible shift toward slower listening experiences, whether through meditative playlists, ambient soundscapes, mantra-based compositions, or devotional music that creates a sense of …

At a time when conversations around emotional wellbeing are becoming increasingly central to everyday life, music that offers stillness, familiarity, and emotional grounding is finding renewed significance. Across age groups, there is a visible shift toward slower listening experiences, whether through meditative playlists, ambient soundscapes, mantra-based compositions, or devotional music that creates a sense of pause within increasingly fast-paced routines. In this wider cultural movement, bhajans are quietly re-emerging as more than traditional spiritual expression. They are becoming a source of emotional anchoring, reflection, and personal healing for many listeners navigating overstimulation and mental fatigue.

Within this evolving space, Meghna Siraj’s musical practice reflects a growing appetite for devotional music that feels intimate and emotionally accessible. Her approach to bhajans retains the spiritual depth of the form while allowing listeners to engage with it in a way that feels personal rather than ceremonial. This has become particularly relevant in a moment where younger audiences are seeking meaningful cultural connections that do not feel distant or formal, but instead fit naturally into contemporary daily life.

The renewed resonance of bhajans also reflects a larger cultural return toward Indian forms of comfort and continuity. As people increasingly revisit inherited practices through modern lenses, devotional music is becoming one of the most immediate ways to reconnect with language, memory, and inner calm. For many, it is not only about faith, but about emotional familiarity and a softer listening environment that contrasts sharply with the pace of digital culture.

Meghna Siraj’s work sits within this larger shift, where devotional music is moving beyond conventional spiritual spaces and entering personal routines as a form of emotional support. In doing so, her music reflects how healing today is often being sought not through spectacle, but through quieter forms of cultural belonging and sound that allows people to slow down.


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BO Correspondent

BO Correspondent

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