Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Fast as Beloved Absence

Fasting as a practice of deliberate separation that deepens longing for the divine, mirroring the lover's experience of beloved absence.

Rumi
Why It Matters

In Rumi's poetry, separation from the beloved creates an exquisite ache that draws the seeker closer to union. Fasting operates similarly: by abstaining from food, we create a controlled emptiness that sharpens our awareness of what we truly hunger for. This is not deprivation as punishment, but as a tool for clarifying desire. The fast becomes a conversation with longing itself. When the stomach empties, the heart expands. Rumi teaches that this sacred hunger mirrors our deepest spiritual yearning—the soul's desperate need for divine presence. By fasting, we rehearse surrender, we practice saying 'no' to the physical so that 'yes' to the spiritual becomes undeniable. This concept transforms fasting from mere discipline into an act of devotion, a love letter written in silence and simplicity.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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