A quality of listening that offers complete presence and acceptance, teaching children how to be heard and how to truly listen to others.
Rabia's spiritual practice centered on listening to and conversing with the Divine with complete devotion and presence. This model of deeply attentive listening transforms how we approach dialogue with young children. Devotional listening means receiving a child's words—whether a three-year-old's rambling story or a five-year-old's elaborate play narrative—as precious communication worthy of full presence. This quality of listening directly supports language development: children whose speech is received with respect develop linguistic confidence and complexity. Devotional listening also teaches boundary-awareness; when an adult fully attends to a child's words, they model that all voices matter and deserve space. Between ages 3-6, children are learning pragmatic language—how to take turns, sustain conversation, and read social cues. When adults practice devotional listening, children internalize that their participation is valued and that reciprocal communication is safe. This listening stance naturally establishes healthy conversational boundaries: the child learns to speak fully, then wait for response; to share their truth, then honor another's. Devotional listening transforms language learning into an experience of being beloved.
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