The deliberate cultivation of states of transcendence and self-forgetting through movement, poetry, and presence, offering spiritual-but-not-religious seekers practical methods for direct mystical experience.
Rumi's whirling dervishes exemplify how the body, music, and focused intention can induce states of ego-dissolution and divine union. For spiritual-but-not-religious practitioners, this practice-based approach to transcendence bypasses doctrinal belief entirely. Ecstatic states—achieved through dance, music, breathwork, or immersion in nature—become direct evidence of a transcendent reality. Rather than accepting others' descriptions of the sacred, practitioners generate their own experiential proof. Rumi's poetry frequently captures these moments of fana (annihilation of self), where individual consciousness merges with universal consciousness. This concept validates peak experiences, flow states, and mystical moments as legitimate spiritual events. For those skeptical of religious authority, the reproducibility of ecstatic states through disciplined practice offers personal autonomy and empirical grounding. The spiritual-but-not-religious path becomes a lived practice of regularly accessing transcendence.
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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