The shamanic experience of yearning for union with the divine, mirroring Rumi's concept of the soul's restless seeking for reunion with God.
In Rumi's tradition, longing (iştiyaq) is not a weakness but the soul's most authentic voice—the burning desire that propels spiritual transformation. Korean and East Asian shamanism similarly recognizes yearning as a catalyst for ecstatic trance and spirit communion. The mudang (Korean shaman) enters altered states through intense longing for contact with ancestors and divine beings. This concept reframes shamanic suffering and emotional intensity not as pathology but as sacred devotion. When a shaman experiences overwhelming grief or desire, these become gateways to the spirit realm. Rumi's poetry of divine love directly illuminates how shamanic practitioners surrender to forces greater than themselves, dissolving ego boundaries through passionate seeking. This framework validates the emotional turbulence central to shamanic initiation and practice.
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