Response To Poetry Essay

Words: 610
Pages: 3

In the set of passages are Poems of a writer named Rumi. The poems selected are “The Man of God”, “Empty the Glass of Your Desire”, and “The One True Light”. The poems suggest that to be human is to be one with one’s self while also having faith in a God or a higher presence.
With this view of being human it can be argued that the deeper a person looks within the more they become distant from God. I agree partially with that argument, because it is possible to become consumed with worldly beliefs in an attempt to find one’s self. Rumi speaks about this with metaphors in the Man of God “The man of God is full without meat”. What Rumi means by “fullness” is satisfaction in what God has provided. A person should not be hungry with what is present but full in what is there. This dependency and central view of God is similar to how the Greeks viewed their Gods and how other civilizations viewed their Gods. On the other hand it is possible that a person can grow closer to god as they look within. An example of this is found with monks who look to seek inner piece as they connect to a higher entity. The subjection to a life away from life’s
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An example of this found in Rumi’s second poem, “Empty the Glass of Your Desire”, he says “Stop looking out there and begin seeing within”. Here it present that he believes that understanding ones desires and self a person makes a person human. I agree with this because self-reflection is the underlying part of the coping phases. The coping phases are denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. The connection between each of these phases is self-reflectance, either by talking it out or meditation each is a method of looking within one’s self. By growing the connection to one’s self humans begin to feel the relief and understanding, to an event that took place or to an experience they may be going