Understanding that true belonging is reciprocal—you belong to community as community belongs to you—not a one-directional plea for acceptance.
Rabia's love poetry reverses the typical power dynamic: she addresses the Divine as both lover and beloved, erasing hierarchy. This models reciprocal belonging. In fitting-in behavior, there's often a desperate asymmetry: you pursue the group's approval while they judge your worthiness. True belonging feels different—it's mutual. Your community needs your presence, gifts, and perspective as much as you need theirs. Rabia's paradox of beloved-and-beloved applies: you are simultaneously seeking belonging and offering it. The practice involves noticing the asymmetry in your belonging attempts. In what communities are you the constant pursuer, proving yourself? Where do you feel genuinely wanted—where your absence is noticed, your voice needed? These latter communities offer reciprocal belonging. You might then ask: can I shift asymmetrical relationships toward reciprocity, or do they fundamentally deny your equal worth? Rabia teaches that belonging to yourself first—recognizing your own belovedness—allows you to enter only reciprocal relationships. This distinction transforms the entire landscape: fitting in seeks one-directional acceptance; belonging creates mutual care.
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