Rumi's understanding that spiritual yearning and incompleteness are not problems to fix but the soul's native language for speaking with the divine.
For Rumi, longing is not a deficiency—it is the soul's direct communication with its source. The ache in your chest, the restlessness that wakes you at night, the sense that something is missing: these are not symptoms of depression but symptoms of aliveness. The sacred in everyday life appears precisely in moments of acute yearning. When you long for your absent beloved, for meaning you cannot articulate, for home you cannot locate, you are speaking the most authentic language of the soul. Rumi teaches that we should not try to satisfy this longing prematurely with distractions or false solutions. Instead, we should listen to what it teaches us. This longing connects us to something vast and alive within us. In daily practice, this means treating your restlessness with reverence rather than judgment, asking what it is trying to teach you, and trusting that incompleteness itself is a form of wholeness—the wholeness of a soul in continuous conversation with infinity.
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.