Rabia spoke to God with intimate names and terms of endearment; children's language development includes learning names for self, others, and feelings—a practice of recognition and intimacy.
Rabia addressed the divine with lover's language—tenderness, specificity, personal names—creating a vocabulary of intimacy. Young children, similarly, are learning to name: themselves ("I," "me," their name), others (mama, dada, friend), and the felt world (happy, ouch, more). This naming is not neutral cataloging but an act of recognition and belonging. When a caregiver helps a child name their feeling—"You're frustrated because you can't reach the blocks"—they're teaching the child that their inner life is real, witnessed, and holds words. When a child calls a caregiver by name or nickname, they're claiming relationship. Language play in early childhood (rhyming names, made-up words, songs) echoes Rabia's devotional language-making. She would see boundaries themselves as a form of naming: when a parent says, "Your sister's body is not for hitting," they're naming both the other's dignity and the child's agency. Rabia's intimate divine language illuminates how childhood language development is always already about recognition, about being named and naming, about the sacredness of being known and calling others by name.
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