Rumi's understanding that seeking itself is the goal parallels Jewish prayer's paradox of speaking to a God who is always already present.
Rumi teaches that the search for God is already the presence of God—the yearning itself is the answer. There is no distance to bridge because love itself closes the gap. This resolves a central paradox in Jewish prayer: if God is omnipresent and omniscient, why pray? Why seek what is already found? The answer, illuminated by Rumi, is that prayer is not primarily about informing God or gaining something external—it is the soul turning toward its Source. The very act of reaching out to God *is* communion with God. The Hasidic teaching that 'there is no descent for the sake of ascent' suggests that even moments of spiritual distance serve the ultimate purpose of deepening devotion. The practice of hitbodedut (speaking to God in one's native language, alone) embodies this: the person who pours out their heart is already united with the One who listens. This concept transforms prayer from instrumental transaction into relational practice—the movement of turning toward God is already the finding of God. Seeking and finding are revealed as a single sacred activity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.