Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Practice of Bearing Witness Without Fixing

Sitting with your child's pain, grief, and confusion without rushing to resolve it, embodying Rabia's patient, compassionate presence.

Rabia
Why It Matters

One of Rabia's most striking practices was her willingness to be present to suffering—her own and others'—without denial or hasty spiritualization. She would weep openly, acknowledge pain, and refuse false comfort. In attachment parenting, this translates to allowing your child to feel the full spectrum of emotion without dismissing, minimizing, or trying to fix it away. When your child is grieving a lost toy, disappointed by a cancelled outing, or struggling with social rejection, your instinct may be to cheer them up or explain why it's not so bad. Rabia's approach suggests something different: sit with them. Validate. Say "that is hard." Let them cry. Stay present. This practice teaches children that their emotions are acceptable, that difficult feelings are survivable, and that they are not alone in them. Over time, this bearing-witness builds the emotional resilience and secure attachment that allows children to integrate the full range of human experience rather than fragmenting or hiding parts of themselves.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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