Rumi

The Poet Saint

Biography:

Rumi was a 13th-century Persian poet, scholar, and Sufi mystic whose writings became some of the most influential spiritual literature in the world. Born in present-day Afghanistan and later living in Konya, in modern-day Turkey, he spent much of his life as a religious teacher and jurist before undergoing a profound spiritual transformation after meeting the wandering mystic Shams Tabrizi.

The intense friendship between Rumi and Shams deeply shaped his life and poetry. After Shams disappeared, Rumi began composing vast amounts of verse exploring love, longing, grief, ecstasy, and union with the divine. His poetry often uses music, dance, nature, and ordinary human experience as mirrors for spiritual truth.

Rumi’s best-known work, the Masnavi, is regarded as one of the great masterpieces of Persian literature and Sufi thought. He is also closely associated with the Mevlevi Order, sometimes known as the “Whirling Dervishes,” whose meditative spinning practice developed from his teachings and devotional gatherings. Today, Rumi’s poetry continues to be widely read across cultures and traditions throughout the world.

Inner Meaning:

Rumi is known around the world as the poet saint of love.

Love, in all its shades and hues, from the most earthly to the purely divine, from the most profound love to the perfectly mundane.

Love makes the world go round. Love pulls us together, love transforms us, love drives our lives and our growth.

Love is yearning and love is fulfilment. Love is the attraction of duality, the world of names and forms, and love is the fragrance of the Absolute.

Without love, what would be the point of all of this?

Whoever you are, wherever you are, and whatever you are seeking—Love is at the the heart of it.

Rumi

The Poet Saint

Biography:

Rumi was a 13th-century Persian poet, scholar, and Sufi mystic whose writings became some of the most influential spiritual literature in the world. Born in present-day Afghanistan and later living in Konya, in modern-day Turkey, he spent much of his life as a religious teacher and jurist before undergoing a profound spiritual transformation after meeting the wandering mystic Shams Tabrizi.

The intense friendship between Rumi and Shams deeply shaped his life and poetry. After Shams disappeared, Rumi began composing vast amounts of verse exploring love, longing, grief, ecstasy, and union with the divine. His poetry often uses music, dance, nature, and ordinary human experience as mirrors for spiritual truth.

Rumi’s best-known work, the Masnavi, is regarded as one of the great masterpieces of Persian literature and Sufi thought. He is also closely associated with the Mevlevi Order, sometimes known as the “Whirling Dervishes,” whose meditative spinning practice developed from his teachings and devotional gatherings. Today, Rumi’s poetry continues to be widely read across cultures and traditions throughout the world.

Inner Meaning:

Rumi is known around the world as the poet saint of love.

Love, in all its shades and hues, from the most earthly to the purely divine, from the most profound love to the perfectly mundane.

Love makes the world go round. Love pulls us together, love transforms us, love drives our lives and our growth.

Love is yearning and love is fulfilment. Love is the attraction of duality, the world of names and forms, and love is the fragrance of the Absolute.

Without love, what would be the point of all of this?

Whoever you are, wherever you are, and whatever you are seeking—Love is at the the heart of it.

Is there a Love in you which doesn’t need an object?

Recall a time something you thought you knew was overturned by your own direct experience.

Compose a poem and recite it to an audience.

Recall a time something you thought you knew was overturned by your own direct experience.

Is there a Love in you which doesn’t need an object?

Compose a poem and recite it to an audience.

How To Play

Welcome to the Garden Oracle.

From the homepage, press open the Oracle and a guide will emerge to meet you.

These guides come from cultures, religions, myths, literature, and spiritual traditions from around the world. Some are fictional, some historical, some legendary. Their purpose is to inspire reflection, curiosity, creativity, and deeper encounter.

Every guide includes a biography and an inner meaning. You may read these to better understand their life, symbolism, and the themes carried within their story.

Consider why this particular figure is appearing at this particular moment in your life.
What might they be illuminating?
What questions do they awaken?

Each of these personages is a profound expression of the human spirit. Visit a bookstore and look for them on the shelves. Watch films connected to their story. Wander through libraries, conversations, myths, and old corners of the internet.

Let the Oracle become a doorway into the richness of our shared human inheritance.

Truth • Dare • Contemplation

Each guide offers the possibility of receiving a Truth, Dare, or Contemplation.

You may play with friends as a kind of mythic truth-or-dare game — a way of moving beyond small talk into honesty, creativity, vulnerability, and genuine encounter.

The prompts are not intended to be dangerous or reckless. Their purpose is to open a space for play, reflection, courage, and human connection.

You may also use the Oracle alone, as a companion for contemplation, journaling, inquiry, or creative inspiration.

There is no fixed way to play.

Notes from the Garden

If you have a meaningful, moving, strange, or inspiring experience with the Oracle, you may leave an anonymous note in the “Notes from the Garden” section.

You can also read reflections and stories left by others.

Tell us how the Oracle crossed your path, what guide appeared, or what insight, experience, synchronicity, or moment of connection emerged along the way.

By sharing your experiences, you become part of the Garden itself — helping shape its evolution over time.

And please, enjoy!

The Garden Oracle is a Garden of Light Studios production.

View all oracles.

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Submit a Note

Submit an anonymous note from the garden to share your experience with the oracle with others. 

Compose a poem and recite it to an audience.

Recall a time something you thought you knew was overturned by your own direct experience.

Is there a Love in you which doesn’t need an object?