However much I might try to expound or explain Love, when I come
However much I might try to expound or explain Love, when I come to Love itself, I am ashamed of my explanations... Love alone can explain the mysteries of love and lovers.
"However much I might try to expound or explain Love, when I come to Love itself, I am ashamed of my explanations... Love alone can explain the mysteries of love and lovers." These profound words from Rumi, the great Sufi mystic and poet, capture the essence of a truth that transcends all logic and reasoning: Love, in its purest form, is beyond words. It is an experience, a divine force that cannot be confined by explanation or the limitations of language. Rumi speaks of a paradox, one that has long perplexed philosophers, poets, and sages alike: how can we fully understand Love when it is so vast, so transformative, and so inherently beyond the capacity of the human mind to grasp?
At the heart of Rumi’s statement lies the notion that Love, when truly felt, renders any attempt to explain it insufficient. It is as if the very attempt to articulate it diminishes its true power. Love, in its highest form, is not something that can be measured, calculated, or neatly explained. It is an emotion that surges through the heart, a mystical experience that transcends reason and logic. The more one tries to describe it, the further one moves from its true essence. Rumi himself, a man of deep spiritual insight, understood this better than most. He spent his life seeking to understand Love, not through words, but through the experience of it, allowing it to transform him from the inside out.
Consider, for instance, the story of Shams of Tabriz, Rumi’s beloved spiritual mentor. Their bond was one of such intensity and depth that it transcended the ordinary realm of teacher and student, becoming a union of souls. Shams awakened Rumi to the mystical truths of Love, and in their time together, Rumi's poetry blossomed into an outpouring of divine inspiration. Yet, even Shams, the one who opened Rumi’s eyes to the truth of Love, could not fully explain it. Their bond, steeped in silence and communion, was one that words could not capture. It was through this silent connection, this shared experience of the divine, that Rumi came to understand that the true nature of Love is not a thing to be taught—it is a thing to be felt.
Rumi's words also echo the teachings of the ancient Greeks, who spoke of Eros—the divine force of Love that compels the soul to transcend itself, to move beyond the physical and into the realm of the divine. Plato, in his dialogue The Symposium, explores the nature of Love as a force that propels one toward beauty, truth, and goodness. Yet even Plato, in his philosophical pursuit of Love, recognizes its mystery. For all his efforts to define it, Eros remains elusive, a force that can never be fully captured in words, only understood through experience. In this way, Rumi’s thoughts on Love align with the ancients' acknowledgment that Love, in its highest form, is always a mystery—a force that can only be felt, not fully explained.
The lesson from Rumi’s words is a call to embrace the mystery of Love—not to explain it away or attempt to tame it with logic, but to allow it to transform us. Love is not a concept to be grasped, but an experience to be lived. It is in the act of loving—of surrendering to the flow of affection, compassion, and devotion—that we come closest to understanding it. The mysteries of love and lovers are not revealed through intellectual explanations, but through the lived experience of loving deeply and being loved in return. Rumi urges us to let go of the desire to explain and simply to experience.
In practical terms, this means we must stop trying to define Love by our own limited concepts and instead allow ourselves to experience it without reservation. In our relationships, whether with family, friends, or lovers, let us seek the mystical in the everyday. Instead of focusing on the logic of love—what should or shouldn’t be done—let us simply open ourselves to the feeling of love. We must surrender to its transformative power, knowing that the greatest truth is not to be found in words but in the quiet spaces between us, in the shared moments of connection.
Finally, Rumi calls us to recognize that Love is not only a gift between two people but a bridge to the divine. To love truly is to touch the eternal, to see beyond the surface of things and to glimpse the divine spark within all beings. Let us remember that in the end, Love is not a commodity to be understood or explained, but a mystery to be lived. By embracing the mystery, we align ourselves with the flow of the divine and, in doing so, allow ourselves to experience the fullness of life, the boundless power of Love, in its most profound form.
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