Rabia's life reveals that belonging emerges when your deepest commitments become inseparable from who you are, rather than values you adopt to fit a group.
In Rabia's understanding, devotion is not something you perform; it is who you become. She lived through hardship—slavery, poverty, loss—yet her love for the Divine remained the organizing principle of her being. This matters profoundly for the fitting in versus belonging distinction. Many people adopt the identity markers of a group (ideology, aesthetics, language, practices) to achieve belonging, treating identity like clothing that can be changed with the season. Rabia's path was different: she allowed her love to consume her, to reshape her character, to become her legacy. This is a belonging built on metamorphosis, not membership. When devotion becomes your identity, you no longer fit in—you belong because your presence expresses something the group deeply needs. The psychological implication is clear: belonging that depends on you wearing the right costume is fragile and exhausting. Belonging rooted in identity transformation—where your values, practices, and commitments reshape who you are—creates anchors that social pressure cannot shake. Rabia's example asks us: what would change if we stopped trying to fit in and started letting our deepest loves reshape us?
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