Approaching long-term organizing work with the steadfast spiritual discipline of daily practice, treating community care as sacred discipline rather than burden.
Rabia devoted herself to continuous prayer and remembrance, understanding spiritual practice as daily sustenance. Community organizers face burnout precisely because organizing is treated as job rather than devotional practice. Devotional persistence means approaching organizing with the discipline and reverence usually reserved for spiritual practice—showing up regularly, performing small rituals of care, treating relationships as sacred commitments. This reframes work: instead of grinding through tasks, organizers move through their day with intentionality, remembering why they serve. Daily practices might include morning meditation on community vision, afternoon check-ins rooted in love, or evening reflection on where power showed up. Communities practicing devotional persistence develop sustainable rhythms, prevent isolation, and experience organizing as nourishing rather than depleting. This allows movements to persist through decades, weathering defeats through spiritual rootedness.
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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