The Sufi spiritual stage where resistance to divine will dissolves, explaining the universal NDE pattern of acceptance and peace that supersedes fear.
Sufi mysticism describes sequential spiritual stations, with surrender representing a critical threshold: the moment when the soul ceases resistance to divine will and enters trust. Near-death experiences universally report this surrender as transformative. The initial fear or struggle—the ego's final resistance—gives way to profound acceptance. Survivors describe letting go of the need to control, return, or understand; in that surrender, overwhelming peace and love emerge. Rumi taught that surrender is not weakness but wisdom: clinging to separate identity is the prison; releasing it is freedom. The station of surrender in Sufi practice mirrors the NDE's turning point: the moment consciousness ceases fighting the transition and instead flows with it. Across cultures and belief systems, this surrender precedes the encounters with light, peace, and transcendent love. The Sufi framework suggests NDEs are involuntary surrenders—situations where the ego's defenses collapse and the soul's native state becomes accessible. In this view, NDEs offer a visceral teaching that surrender itself is the gateway to transcendence.
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