Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Paradox of Belonging and Solitude

Balancing the infant's need for secure bonding with honoring their essential aloneness and individual selfhood from birth.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia lived much of her life in intense solitude devoted to God, yet also taught that all souls belong to the Divine community. This paradox illuminates a crucial dimension of healthy bonding: the infant needs secure attachment AND the development of a self separate from the caregiver. True bonding does not mean fusion or enmeshment but a secure base from which the child can safely explore their own being. The caregiver's role is to provide the safety that allows solitude to be restorative rather than threatening. In infancy, this means being reliably present while also respecting the infant's own inner life—their unique temperament, their need for quiet, their individual rhythm. Rabia's integration of solitude and communion models what secure attachment actually is: not constant merging but the capacity to be both connected and autonomous. This framework prevents the common pitfall of bonding that binds rather than liberates.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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