Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Community Witness and Collective Belonging

Building attachment security through community presence, understanding parenting as a collective practice, not an isolated nuclear family effort.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia lived within a spiritual community, and while her love for the divine was intensely personal, it existed within relational context. Attachment parenting is often framed as an intensive dyadic practice between parent and child, but Rabia's legacy suggests a broader vision: secure attachment develops within community witness and collective care. Your child needs not just one attuned parent but a village—grandparents, teachers, neighbors, faith communities—who see them, affirm their belonging, and participate in their wellbeing. This doesn't diminish parental responsibility; rather, it situates it within a larger web of belonging. Modern isolation intensifies parenting pressure and limits children's secure base. Rabia's tradition invites you to intentionally build and maintain community—to allow others to love and witness your child, to share the weight of caregiving, to model for your child that they belong to something larger than the nuclear family. Children who experience secure attachment within a caring community develop more resilient, flexible security. They learn that belonging is abundant, that they matter to many people, and that they too can be part of caring for others.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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