Rabia's oscillation between intense community and profound solitude shows belonging as an interior state, not merely external affiliation.
Rabia moved between states of ecstatic communion with the Divine and periods of solitary longing—both expressions of her belonging to something transcendent. This reveals a crucial insight: belonging isn't only about external community; it's also about interior alignment with something larger than yourself. She could leave gatherings to sit alone in prayer because her fundamental belonging was secured elsewhere. This distinction matters greatly for people who fit in by constant social engagement: they fear solitude as abandonment. But in Rabia's model, solitude is a form of belonging—time spent in intimate presence with what truly matters. Modern life often conflates belonging with constant visibility and connectivity. Rabia's practice suggests that true belonging includes capacity for sacred solitude—times when you're fully present with your own deepest values and with the transcendent dimension of life, however you understand it.
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