Exploring how the Pacific Ocean functions as both literal and metaphorical presence in Indigenous spiritualities, mirroring Rumi's use of water imagery to represent the soul's dissolution into divine being.
Rumi frequently describes the soul as water returning to the ocean—individual form dissolving into undifferentiated wholeness. For Pacific Indigenous peoples, the ocean is not metaphor but living presence, teacher, and kin that shapes every dimension of existence. This concept brings Rumi's mystical water imagery into conversation with Pacific realities where oceanic connection structures spiritual practice, navigation, sustenance, and cosmology. The Pacific Ocean itself functions as a teacher embodying core spiritual principles: flow, interconnection, cyclical renewal, and the dissolution of individual boundaries into larger systems. Pacific islanders' ancestral navigation techniques represent spiritual technology where humans attune to oceanic intelligence through observation and relationship. Rumi's poetic dissolution into water becomes literal geographical reality for Pacific peoples for whom the ocean constantly demonstrates fana—the continuous annihilation of separate form into participatory flow. This framework honors Pacific Indigenous knowledges as sophisticated spiritual practices, not romantic metaphors.
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