Understanding that genuine belonging requires nested circles of intimacy—not everyone is a confidant, and this is healthy, not lonely.
Rabia maintained strict relationships while being universally accessible, teaching that belonging does not mean identical closeness with everyone. Healthy community has ecology: some relationships are deep wells of intimacy, others are courteous exchanges, still others are distant waves of care. This concept opposes the modern confusion that belonging means being close friends with everyone or fitting seamlessly into every social context. True belonging respects these natural boundaries. You belong to a community through multiple types of connection, not through performing sameness everywhere. Rabia belonged to Basra through her prayer and service, but only a few shared her deepest spiritual states. This framework frees you from the exhaustion of trying to be equally intimate with everyone while also protecting against the shame of not fitting in to casual social contexts. Real belonging creates permission structures: it is safe to be formal here, vulnerable there, distant elsewhere. This ecology mirrors nature—concentric rings of relationship, each appropriate to its distance from the center. Recognizing these natural structures transforms fitting in from a single metric into a nuanced practice.
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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