A systematic spiritual discipline for developing sustained, loving attention toward ancestors through daily contemplation, ritual, and service.
Rabia's entire life was organized around devotion—structured practices of prayer, remembrance, and service that kept her oriented toward spiritual reality. The Devotion Practice applies this framework to ancestor engagement: creating regular rhythms of attention that signal to both conscious and unconscious mind that ancestors matter. This might include morning acknowledgment of ancestral presence, weekly altar maintenance, monthly storytelling circles, or annual commemorations. The key is consistency, which demonstrates commitment and allows depth to develop. Rabia teaches that true devotion isn't effortful straining but joyful, natural expression of love—suggesting that these practices should feel generative rather than obligatory. Across traditions, this appears in Japanese household kamidana maintenance, African diaspora altar work, and Indigenous ceremony cycles. The practice rewires habitual consciousness, gradually shifting how you perceive inheritance and responsibility. Over time, devotion creates a felt sense of ancestral presence that informs daily decisions and provides resilience during difficulty.
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.