Reframing shamanic trance and possession as a form of embodied prayer and direct communication with the divine, grounded in Rumi's devotional intensity.
In Rumi's spiritual practice, prayer transcends verbal petition to become a state of total presence and surrender—the soul crying out to God with every fiber of being. The shamanic trance state functions identically: the mudang's entire body becomes prayer, their possession becomes intercession, their ecstatic utterance becomes supplication. When the shaman trembles, dances, and channels spirit voices, they are engaged in the most authentic form of prayer—not words directed toward heaven but the entire self offered as an instrument of divine will. Rumi's framework rejects the distinction between 'ordinary' prayer and shamanic ecstatic practice, revealing both as authentic human-divine communion. The shaman's vulnerability and intensity of presence mirror the spiritual aspiration Rumi describes. In this view, shamanic ritual is continuous prayer—the shaman remains always in supplicatory stance before the spirits they serve. This concept elevates shamanic practice from folk performance to legitimate spiritual discipline, recognizing that embodied trance-prayer may access divine presence more directly than verbal petition, dissolving the boundary between practitioner and the sacred they commune with.
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