Jalaluddin Rumi, the 13th-century Sufi mystic, did not just write poetry; he lived a "word cascade." To read Rumi is to stand beneath a waterfall of divine inspiration where language doesn't just describe a feeling—it becomes the feeling.
To truly step into the cascade of Rumi’s mystical poems, one must understand the recurring currents that pull at the soul: Rumi: The Mystical Poet - Broncho Blogs - UCO
His verses act as a bridge between the mundane and the transcendent, inviting us to lose our "clay and water" selves in the intoxicating flow of divine love. The Architecture of the Cascade