A framework for community resource management based on meeting actual needs and fostering abundance mindset rather than scarcity competition.
Rabia famously renounced material wealth and lived simply, yet her teachings created abundance of spiritual wealth and communal resources. This concept applies her renunciation wisdom to modern community economics. Rather than approaching resources competitively or hoarding them, communities can organize around sufficiency—ensuring all members' genuine needs are met while redirecting surplus toward shared flourishing. This requires shifting from scarcity mentality to abundance consciousness, believing there is enough. Rabia's tradition suggests that when we release attachment to personal accumulation, resources paradoxically become more abundant for the whole. Practically, communities can implement this through transparent budgeting, needs-based distribution systems, and shared ownership models. Members learn to distinguish wants from needs, developing contentment and freeing energy from economic anxiety toward deeper community life. This economics recognizes that pure devotion to community, like Rabia's devotion to the divine, requires releasing calculative thinking about personal return. Communities organized around sufficiency and generosity experience greater trust, cooperation, and genuine mutual aid.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.