Celtic tradition identifies thresholds—doorways, boundaries, twilight times—as places of power where worlds meet; Rumi's mysticism similarly inhabits the liminal space between human and divine.
In Celtic spirituality, thresholds hold extraordinary power: the doorway between house and wild, dusk between day and night, the shoreline between land and sea, the season-turnings between growth and decay. These in-between spaces are thin places where the visible and invisible worlds touch, where prophecy flows more readily and spiritual communion deepens. Rumi similarly dwells in the threshold between human and divine, between reason and love, between the false self and true self. His ecstatic states occur precisely in these liminal zones where categories collapse and transcendence becomes possible. The spiritual path itself is a threshold—neither fully of the world nor fully transcendent, but suspended in the sacred space between. In practice, this means intentionally inhabiting thresholds: meditating at dawn, gathering at the forest edge, marking seasonal turning points with ritual, speaking truths that stand between worlds. By honoring these liminal spaces with full awareness, practitioners access heightened perception, prophetic insight, and direct encounter with the sacred dimensions usually hidden from ordinary consciousness.
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.