A practice of radically attentive listening to children's attempts at communication, honoring their emerging voice as sacred expression.
Rabia's devotion was characterized by total presence and listening to the Divine. Applied to early childhood, this becomes a discipline of listening—truly hearing the child's utterances, gestures, and play narratives as meaningful communication worthy of reverence. Rather than rushing to correct or redirect, the caregiver practices patient attention to what the child is attempting to express. This validates the child's agency in language while naturally modeling expanded vocabulary and grammar. When a child says "doggy big," a devoted listener responds with genuine curiosity: "Yes, the doggy is big!" The child experiences their linguistic effort as seen and valued. This practice honors the boundary between the child's emerging self-expression and adult language conventions, allowing the child to gradually internalize more complex forms while maintaining confidence in their communicative power and belonging within the relationship.
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