The Sufi teaching that encountering the divine reveals not something foreign but the soul's own deepest nature, explaining why NDE encounters feel both other and intimately known.
Rumi taught that the Beloved is not separate from the lover—the divine is encountered as one's own eternal self. This paradox resolves the universal NDE mystery: why does encountering ultimate reality feel simultaneously like meeting something infinitely other and recognizing something intimately known? The light, presence, or being encountered in NDEs is reported as supremely foreign yet perfectly familiar—more real than one's own self yet absolutely recognizable. Sufi mysticism explains this by dissolving the false dichotomy: the soul and the divine are not two meeting as strangers but one reality recognizing itself. When NDE survivors report encountering unconditional love that knows them completely, they describe meeting not an external deity but their true self as it exists in divine consciousness. Across traditions, this encounter generates not shock but profound recognition—as if waking from a dream to find oneself eternally known and loved. The mirror teaching validates NDEs as moments when the soul recognizes what it always was.
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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