I was sixteen when I found a battered copy of a book on Eastern philosophy at my local library, the kind with the spine half falling off and someone else’s pencil marks in the margins. I checked it out mostly because the cover looked mysterious, which is a deeply teenage reason to read anything. But somewhere between those underlined passages and my own confused notes, I stumbled onto Rumi for the first time: “There is nothing outside of yourself. Look within. Everything you want is there.”
I didn’t get it. Not really. I nodded along the way teenagers nod at things that sound profound, then went right back to chasing the stuff I thought would actually make me whole — better grades, the right friends, eventually a psychology degree, eventually a “real” career.
It took me about fifteen years and a stint shifting TVs in a Melbourne warehouse to realize Rumi wasn’t being poetic. He was being literal. And I’d been getting it wrong the whole time.
The illusion of external fulfillment
We live in a world that constantly tells us we’re not enough. Not successful enough, not attractive enough, not wealthy enough. The message is clear: happiness is something you achieve, buy, or earn.
I bought into this completely. After finishing my psychology degree, I thought education would be my ticket to fulfillment. Then I found myself shifting TVs in that warehouse, wondering how I’d gotten so far from where I thought I’d be. That gap between education and fulfillment? Massive. And humbling. The thing is, no amount of external achievement can satisfy an internal void. It’s like trying to fill a bucket with a hole in the bottom — you can pour in success, relationships, material possessions, but if you haven’t addressed what’s happening inside, you’ll always feel empty.
Buddhist philosophy calls this the “hungry ghost” mentality. Always consuming, never satisfied. Sound familiar?
The truth is, everything we’re searching for externally already exists within us. Peace, joy, contentment, love — these aren’t things we find. They’re states we cultivate from within.
Looking within starts with stillness
Here’s the problem: most of us are terrified of stillness.
We fill every moment with noise, distraction, productivity. Our phones buzz constantly. Netflix autoplays the next episode before you’ve even processed the last one (the streaming equivalent of “just one more level” on the PlayStation). We schedule back-to-back meetings and wear busyness like a badge of honor.
Why? Because in stillness, we might actually have to face ourselves.
When I started experimenting with Buddhist principles in daily life, the first thing I noticed was my resistance to simply being. Sitting in meditation for even five minutes felt torturous. My mind would race through to-do lists, replay conversations, plan futures that might never happen.
But here’s what I discovered: that resistance is exactly where the work begins.
Look, looking within requires creating space for introspection. It means sitting with discomfort instead of scrolling through Instagram. It means asking yourself hard questions instead of drowning them out with another podcast.
Start with just five minutes of sitting quietly each day. No agenda, no goal, just presence. Notice what comes up. Notice your resistance. Notice how desperately your mind wants to be anywhere but here, now, with yourself.
This is where the real journey begins.
Your inner resources are infinite
What exactly are we supposed to find when we look within?
For starters, resilience. Think about everything you’ve survived so far. Every heartbreak, failure, disappointment. You made it through because you had inner strength you didn’t even know existed until you needed it.
Then there’s creativity. Every solution to every problem you’ve ever solved came from within you. Sure, you might have gathered information externally, but the synthesis, the insight, the “aha” moment? That was all you.
And wisdom. Not the kind you read in books (though I’ve certainly read my share, including writing my own Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego), but the deep knowing that comes from lived experience and self-reflection.
The resources within you are literally infinite. You have access to peace that doesn’t depend on circumstances. Joy that doesn’t require permission. Love that doesn’t need reciprocation.
Sounds too good to be true? That’s because we’ve been trained to believe that anything valuable must be difficult to obtain, preferably expensive, and definitely outside ourselves.
The practice of self-inquiry
Looking within isn’t passive. It’s an active practice of self-inquiry that requires courage and honesty.
Ask yourself: What am I really seeking when I chase that promotion? What feeling am I hoping that relationship will give me? What void am I trying to fill with this purchase?
Usually, the answer is something like safety, validation, love, or peace. And here’s the kicker — you can give all of these things to yourself.
This doesn’t mean becoming a hermit or giving up on external goals. I still set ambitious targets, build relationships, and yes, occasionally buy things I don’t strictly need. The difference is I’m no longer looking for these things to complete me.
When parenting my daughter, I’ve found this principle invaluable. Babies demand presence like nothing else. They don’t care about your achievements or possessions, they respond to your energy, your attention, your ability to be fully here with them. In those moments of pure presence with her, I’m reminded that everything she needs from me comes from within me. Not from what I can buy her or achieve for her, but from who I am when I’m with her.
Practical ways to turn inward
So how do you actually do this “looking within” thing?
First, develop a meditation practice. Doesn’t have to be fancy. Sit, breathe, observe your thoughts without judgment. Even five minutes daily can transform your relationship with yourself.
Second, journal without censoring yourself. Write whatever comes up, especially the stuff you’d never say out loud. This is where you’ll find your truth.
Third, spend time alone without distractions. Take walks without podcasts. Eat meals without screens. Drive without music sometimes. Give yourself space to just be with yourself.
Fourth, question your desires. When you want something, pause and ask what you’re really seeking. Often, you’ll find you can give yourself that feeling directly, without the external thing.
Finally, practice self-compassion. Looking within doesn’t mean criticizing what you find. It means accepting yourself completely, shadows and all.
Conclusion
Rumi’s words aren’t just poetry. They’re an invitation to the most important journey you’ll ever take: the journey inward.
Everything you’re searching for really is within you. Not in some mystical, woo-woo way, but in a practical, accessible way that you can tap into right now. The peace you’re seeking is in your ability to accept this moment exactly as it is. The love you’re craving starts with how you treat yourself. The fulfillment you’re chasing comes from aligning with your inner truth, not external expectations.
Honestly, I still forget this most days. I catch myself reaching for my phone, refreshing something, hoping the next notification will be the one that finally settles me. It never is. And then I remember what teenage me underlined in that library book, what middle-aged me is still slowly learning, what Rumi apparently figured out centuries ago while I’m over here treating it like breaking news.
Everything you want is already there. I’m still working on believing it too.










