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🎬 Title: “He Drank Poison — And Called It Love | The Deep Truth Behind This Sufi Verse” (Soft background music… slow, reflective tone) Imagine someone saying: “Bulleh Shah made a deal. He drank a cup of poison. He took no profit, no loss. He carried a bundle of pain and sorrow. Come, friends, congratulate me — I have found my beloved Ranjha.” Wait… what? He drank poison. He carried pain. And he wants congratulations? This is not ordinary poetry. This is spiritual rebellion. When Bulleh Shah says he “drank poison,” he is not talking about literal poison. He is talking about accepting pain, criticism, rejection, and struggle — willingly. Choosing truth in a world of lies feels like poison. Choosing love in a world of ego feels like poison. Choosing growth instead of comfort feels like poison. But here is the twist — he calls it a “deal.” Why? Because he understood something most of us don’t. Every great transformation requires swallowing discomfort. You cannot grow without discomfort. You cannot evolve without losing your old self. You cannot find peace without facing your inner storms. He says, “I took no profit, no loss.” Meaning — he stopped calculating life. We are always calculating: What will I gain? What will people think? Is this worth it? But real love — real purpose — real spirituality — begins when you stop doing business with life and start surrendering to it. Then he says he carried “a bundle of pain.” Yes, pain is part of the journey. But here’s where the caption connects beautifully: “Life is not about waiting for the storm to pass, but learning how to dance in it.” Bulleh Shah did not wait for pain to disappear. He embraced it. He transformed it. And then comes the most powerful line: “Come, friends, congratulate me — I have found Ranjha.” Ranjha here symbolizes the Divine, the True Self, the Ultimate Peace. He is saying: I suffered. I was criticized. I walked alone. But in that struggle, I found my Beloved. In modern life, “Ranjha” could mean: Your purpose. Your inner peace. Your authentic self. Your calling. The world may think you are losing — but if you are becoming stronger, wiser, more peaceful — you are winning. Sometimes you have to drink the poison of discipline. Sometimes you have to carry the pain of growth. Sometimes you have to lose comfort to gain clarity. And when you finally meet your true self — when you align with your purpose — you will also say: “Come, congratulate me. I found what truly matters.” So don’t fear the storm in your life. Dance in it. Learn in it. Grow in it. Because maybe the pain you are avoiding today is the same pain that will introduce you to your Ranjha tomorrow. 🌿✨