The Daoist principle of non-action becomes a devotional practice of surrendering personal will to the divine flow, as Rumi's ecstatic surrender models alignment with the Tao.
Wu wei, or non-action, describes the Daoist art of moving without forcing, acting without striving. Rumi's mystical tradition teaches that true surrender—fana, the dissolution of self—mirrors this effortless alignment with reality's deepest current. When the lover releases personal ambition and ego-driven effort, they become a clear channel for the Tao's unfolding. This is not passivity but radical receptivity: the self thins until only the movement of existence remains. In Daoism, the sage abides in this naturalness. In Rumi's Sufism, the beloved lover achieves it through longing so complete that the boundary between self and divine dissolves. Both traditions recognize that true power emerges not from force but from intimate attunement to what already moves through us.
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