The Sufi cultivation of the observing self that witnesses both external life and inner experience, allowing prayer to operate at multiple levels simultaneously.
In Sufi practice, which Rumi exemplified, practitioners develop what might be called witness consciousness—a dimension of awareness that observes the self thinking, feeling, and acting without identification or judgment. This creates space between stimulus and response, allowing prayer to function not just at the level of petition but at the level of awareness itself. When you pray while maintaining witness consciousness, you simultaneously observe your thoughts, emotions, and reactions arising—this multiplicity of attention itself becomes transformative. You can pray vocally while witnessing the thoughts interrupting your prayer, witnessing your frustration with distraction, and holding compassion for it all. Modern contemplative neuroscience demonstrates that this divided attention—simultaneously engaging with experience and observing the engagement—activates higher integration in the brain. The evidence that prayer works through witness consciousness appears as the gradual transparency of your own patterns: you begin to see how your beliefs create your reality, how your unconscious drives shape your prayers, and how much of what you sought was already within you. This seeing itself changes everything.
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.