Rumi centered spirituality in the heart as the seat of divine presence; Vajrayana uses the heart chakra as the mandala's center, the axis of enlightened perception.
For Rumi, the heart is not romantic sentiment but the innermost sanctuary where the Beloved dwells eternally. Vajrayana Buddhism similarly privileges the heart center (anahata chakra) as the supreme mandala—the palace of enlightened mind. Both traditions recognize the heart as transcendent ground rather than merely emotional organ. In tantric practice, channels of subtle energy converge at the heart; visualizations and meditations culminate there. Rumi's poetry transforms the heart through devotional heat, burning away illusion. The tantric practitioner awakens channels and winds centered in the heart to activate primordial wisdom. Where Rumi uses poetic metaphor and ecstatic speech to awaken this center, the tantric adept uses visualization, breath control, and ritual action. Both traditions insist the heart's opening is not metaphorical—it is the transformation of consciousness itself.
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