Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Devotional Presence During Difficult Moments

Bringing Rabia's steadfast devotion to moments of parental challenge—illness, tantrums, grief—as spiritual practice and attachment anchor.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia maintained her love and presence through profound suffering, including slavery and poverty, viewing hardship as deepening her devotion. In attachment parenting, difficult moments—a feverish infant, a toddler's meltdown, sleep deprivation—test the parent's capacity for consistent, loving presence. This concept invites parents to treat these moments as devotional practice: staying present with compassion when the child is dysregulated, when the parent is exhausted, when outcomes feel uncertain. Research on attachment shows that children who experience parental attunement during distress—rather than punishment or dismissal—develop secure attachment and healthy emotional regulation. Rabia's model suggests that these challenging moments are not obstacles to connection but rather opportunities to deepen it. When a parent can bring spiritual centeredness to a 3 a.m. crying session or a public tantrum, they are practicing the kind of unconditional presence that creates profound belonging and resilience in the child.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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