The practice of combining strategic thinking with contemplative listening, allowing intuitive wisdom and collective sensing to inform organizing decisions.
Rabia's spiritual practice cultivated profound listening to both the divine and her own deepest knowing. In organizing, contemplative strategy integrates traditional campaign planning with practices that quiet reactive thinking: silent reflection before major decisions, deep listening circles where people speak from their truest selves, and attention to intuitive signals about timing and direction. Collective discernment means moving beyond quick votes toward processes where the group's wisdom emerges through patient conversation and meditation. This honors both rational analysis and the embodied knowing that emerges when diverse people think together. Organizing rooted in contemplative practice reports stronger unity (decisions feel collectively owned), more creative solutions (space for intuition expands possibilities), and greater resilience (people understand the why deeply). These practices also prevent manipulation and groupthink by insisting on space for honest questions and authentic uncertainty, creating organizing cultures that feel genuinely democratic.
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