Speaking truth with joy and freedom rather than obligation, creating communication cultures where authenticity feels liberating.
Rabia was known for her ecstatic utterances—wild, beautiful expressions of her spiritual state that startled and awakened those around her. She spoke truth not from obligation but from overwhelming inner reality. This concept invites communities to cultivate communication cultures where honesty emerges from joy rather than duty. Many communities establish accountability or transparency practices that feel heavy—people speaking truth from guilt or because they're required to. Rabia's model suggests instead creating conditions where truth-telling feels like freedom. This happens through radical acceptance: when people know they'll be met with curiosity rather than judgment, when vulnerability is celebrated, when authenticity is treated as a gift to the community. Communities can cultivate this through practices like council circles, artistic expression, regular celebrations of growing edges, and leaders modeling their own struggles without shame. When truth-telling becomes ecstatic rather than obligatory, communities transform. People share more freely, conflicts surface earlier, and the collective wisdom deepens. Communication becomes not a chore but a form of belonging itself.
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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