The paradoxical principle that deepest community belonging emerges when youth surrender personal will to collective spiritual purpose.
Rabia's concept of tawhid—complete surrender to divine unity—illuminates a crucial pattern in Indigenous coming-of-age: the young person must surrender their separate, child-self to truly belong to the community and ancestral line. This is not erasure but metamorphosis. Through vision quests, naming ceremonies, or initiation ordeals, youth release attachment to who they thought they were, making space for who their people need them to become. Rabia teaches that this surrender is not loss but liberation—the boundaries between self and community dissolve, revealing their essential unity. Indigenous traditions have always known this: belonging happens through ritual death and rebirth, through breaking down individual ego-boundaries, through learning that 'I' only exists as part of 'we.' This surrender paradoxically grants the deepest freedom: to act authentically within one's sacred role.
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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