The dissolution of ego-driven needs in radical service to community, creating freedom from resentment and competition.
Rabia practiced fana—annihilation of self before the Divine—which freed her from personal ambition, fear, and desire for recognition. Translated to community building, this concept invites members to gradually dissolve the defensive ego that measures, compares, and hoards. When individuals cease demanding that community serve their needs and instead serve collectively, transformation occurs. This isn't self-sacrifice or codependency; it's the liberation that comes when ego-defenses drop. Rabia's tradition teaches that this surrender is paradoxically empowering: when you stop needing credit, you work with authenticity; when you stop fearing loss, you give freely. In intentional communities, members who practice this annihilation—releasing need for control, recognition, or special status—become community anchors. Their freedom from ego-driven reactivity settles others. Conflicts resolve faster when members aren't protecting identity. This practice requires spiritual maturity but creates communities of remarkable generosity, where people serve because they've tasted the freedom of non-attachment.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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