Understanding each child's emerging speech as the voice of the beloved within, deserving recognition and celebration.
Rabia's mystical experience centered on recognition: being known by the divine beloved. For young children, language development is fundamentally about being recognized—having one's thoughts, feelings, and authentic self received and mirrored back. When a child expresses themselves (in words, gesture, play, or unintelligible sounds), they're seeking recognition: "Does anyone hear me? Am I real to you?" In Rabia's tradition, the beloved (the divine) recognizes all of creation perfectly. Applied here, adults become mirrors who recognize each child's emerging voice as precious and real. This transforms language pedagogy: we're not teaching children to speak correctly; we're helping them recognize their own voice as worth hearing. Play-language and play-boundaries become sites of recognition. When a child negotiates space in play and an adult truly listens—"I hear you need your own block tower"—the child's voice, needs, and sense of self are recognized. This recognition is the actual nutrient in language development.
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.