Showing posts with label fana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fana. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 September 2024

The Root; A Philosophical Perspective

 Everything is best when it is attached to its origin or where it has originated. There are a few examples that can help us better understand the concept. The fruits detached from a tree are spoiled or lose their value. The organ of the human body is very precious but when it is separated from the body it loses its wattage. The animal in its group is safe if it is in the band. But when it leaves its group it becomes prey. Like it, if you are accompanied by your family (spiritual or biological) you are active as a ripened fruit in a tree or a healthy organ in a body. If you lose the company of the good people, you will soon be in the position of prey like that animal who left its group or the organ out of a body. Which obviously, will not be longer in use. Be with those who are purified so that you would also be juvenile.

Friday, 30 August 2024

Rumi's Silence

 

All day I think about it, then at night I say it.

Where did I come from, and what should I do?

 I have no idea. My soul is from elsewhere,

I'm sure of that, and I intend to end up there.

                                                                                                                                  Rumi

Rumi's prose, as you describe it, beautifully captures a common theme in mystic poetry and philosophy: the sense of a profound connection to a spiritual realm beyond the physical world. Rumi's reflection on his inability to express his inner thoughts during the day, contrasted with his silent revelations at night, illustrates a mystical journey inward, where the soul yearns for its true home—a divine origin or an existence beyond the material world.

In saying that he is "from something else" and "not a creature of this world," Rumi emphasizes his awareness of the spiritual nature of his being. This awareness leads to a form of detachment from worldly affairs, as mystics often view the material world as a temporary state, a stepping stone to a higher, more meaningful reality.

Similarly, Khalil Gibran’s metaphor of the dying as a ship sailing out of sight aligns with this mystical understanding. The ship’s departure from one shore and its simultaneous arrival at another reflect the soul's journey from the physical world to the spiritual realm.

In short, both Rumi and Gibran's works reflect a detachment from the mundane and a deep yearning for a connection to the spiritual. It not something taking refuge from once responsibilities, but it is the cry of the heart that feels away from the body. We all are back toward the home but this does not mean excuse.

The Root; A Philosophical Perspective

 Everything is best when it is attached to its origin or where it has originated. There are a few examples that can help us better understan...