Cultivating deep listening to the child's inner world as spiritual practice and essential parenting skill, contrasting with authoritarian dismissal of child perspective.
Rabia al-Adawiyya was known for her wisdom-bearing speech that emerged from profound listening—to the Divine, to others' struggles, to the truth beneath surface words. This quality of attention becomes crucial in distinguishing authoritative from authoritarian parenting. Authoritative parents practice the discipline of listening: they create space for children to express feelings, doubts, and perspectives without immediate correction or dismissal. This listening is not permissive agreement but genuine attempt to understand the child's interior world. Authoritarian parents listen selectively, filtering for compliance or defiance. Rabia's model suggests that listening itself is a form of spiritual discipline and parental authority. When children experience being truly heard, they develop voice, resilience, and capacity for self-reflection. The parent who listens deeply gains crucial information about the child's actual developmental needs, fears, and strengths. This listening informs more precise, responsive guidance. Through listening, parents honor the child as a person worthy of attention, which deepens both authority and love.
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