A structural framework where community members practice mutual support equally, rejecting hierarchies of care-giving and care-receiving.
Rabia envisioned spiritual community as concentric circles of mutual devotion rather than hierarchical pyramids. The Circle of Reciprocal Care applies this model structurally: everyone simultaneously gives and receives support, ensuring no person becomes a permanent caregiver or dependent. This prevents burnout among volunteers and protects against power imbalances where some members are valued primarily as helpers. Practical structures include rotating roles, explicit mutual aid agreements, and accountability for receiving help gracefully as for giving it. Many communities fail because invisible hierarchies emerge—certain people always help, others always need—creating resentment and unsustainability. By contrast, circles practicing reciprocal care develop resilience because vulnerability becomes normalized and distributed. This framework honors human dignity by recognizing that everyone has both gifts and needs, and that genuine community emerges when this truth is structurally embedded.
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