The mystical dissolution of individual ego into the infinite presence of God, where personal identity surrenders to divine unity and infinite being.
Bittul ha-yesh, the annihilation of somethingness, describes the ultimate mystical goal where individual existence dissolves into divine infinity—Ayin, the state of nothingness preceding all creation. This concept crystallizes the deepest aim of both Sufi and Hasidic mysticism: the ego's complete surrender to divine reality. Rumi's poetry constantly returns to this theme—the lover's desperate dissolution into the Beloved, the drop disappearing into the ocean. In Hasidic thought, bittul ha-yesh represents not nihilism but liberation from the illusion of separate selfhood; one realizes that only God truly exists, and individual consciousness is a temporary expression of divine manifestation. This state transcends emotional experience; it represents direct gnosis that the entire universe, including oneself, is divine emanation. The Hasidic masters taught that this annihilation paradoxically restores authentic selfhood—freed from ego's distortions, one becomes transparent to divine will. Bittul ha-yesh is simultaneously the most dangerous and most liberating spiritual attainment.
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