A practice of defining yourself through relationship to the Divine rather than through social roles, creating coherence across all contexts.
Rabia's revolutionary move was centering her entire identity on devotion to God rather than on daughter, woman, mystic, or teacher roles. The Beloved—God—became her primary belonging, making all other relationships authentic expressions rather than desperate searches for validation. This concept addresses a core confusion in modern belonging: the belief that communities should define who you are. Instead, this framework suggests that you first become fully human through connection to something transcendent, then you can meet others as a whole person. The distinction from fitting in is crucial: fitting in requires fragmenting yourself into group-appropriate pieces, while Beloved-centered identity keeps you integrated. Your values, desires, and choices align because they flow from one source rather than competing loyalties. The practice involves regular contemplation of what or whom you most deeply love—beyond obligation or preference—and allowing that love to organize your choices and relationships. Over time, this creates a coherence that no amount of fitting in can achieve. People feel your wholeness and authentic belonging becomes possible.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.