Rumi's metaphor of spiritual drunkenness as a framework for understanding shamanic altered consciousness and spirit possession.
Rumi frequently uses intoxication as a metaphor for the soul overwhelmed by divine love—a drunkenness that transcends ordinary perception and reveals hidden realities. Korean shamanic trance operates similarly: the mudang becomes 'drunk' on spiritual power, moving with involuntary grace, speaking in voices not their own, perceiving multiple planes of existence simultaneously. This is not chemical intoxication but sacred inebriation with the divine. Rumi's framework validates that shamanic practitioners are not experiencing delusional confusion but rather a heightened clarity that ordinary consciousness cannot access. The ecstatic movement, glossolalia, and prophetic utterance common in shamanic ritual find profound meaning in Rumi's language of spiritual wine and cosmic intoxication. This concept transforms the shaman's vulnerability and loss of rational control into evidence of genuine union with transcendent power. The body becomes an instrument of divine expression through this sacred drunkenness.
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