Pure devotion is reimagined as cyclical caregiving where each generation tends to those before and after them.
Rabia's devotion to the Divine was unconditional, expecting nothing in return. In ubuntu practice, devotion becomes reciprocal caregiving across the lifespan: children care for aging parents; parents invest in children's futures; communities care for orphans and elders alike. This is not exchange—it is the natural rhythm of interdependence. Intergenerational responsibility thrives when younger generations understand caregiving not as burden but as devotion, as the way they honor the love they received in infancy. Elders understand that releasing control and receiving care from youth is devotion too—it allows the young to embody ubuntu values. Communities establish systems ensuring no one becomes invisible or abandoned: childcare is shared, healing is collective, and resources flow toward vulnerability. This reciprocal devotion prevents the isolation of aging and ensures every life stage has purpose and protection.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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