The fluid reciprocal dynamic where parent and infant each serve as beloved and lover to the other.
In Rabia's mysticism, the distinction between lover and beloved dissolved; she was both in complete union. Applied to early bonding, this paradoxical framework suggests that while the infant is materially dependent and the parent materially responsible, there is a spiritual reciprocity. The parent loves the infant; the infant's existence calls forth and transforms the parent's capacity for love. The infant is beloved; the infant's being elicits devotion. The parent is lover; the parent's care awakens the infant's capacity to receive and eventually to give love. This is not burdensome expectation on the infant but a recognition of the relational depth present from birth. The infant does affect the parent profoundly; this is real and beautiful. Early bonding is not a one-directional giving but a mutual transformation. The infant teaches the parent about love; the parent teaches the infant about belonging. Both are changed. This framework protects against two distortions: the parent-as-martyr who sacrifices endlessly without receiving, and the infant-as-project that the parent manipulates. Instead, early bonding becomes a sacred exchange where both parties are honored as agents in the relationship, each with their own inner life and dignity, meeting in love.
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