Rabia's ecstatic devotion mirrors the unselfconscious joy of young children at play, revealing how authentic playfulness becomes a path to learning language naturally.
Rabia's spiritual practice involved abandoning ego-consciousness to experience pure connection with the divine. Young children naturally embody this state during absorbed play—fully present, unselfconscious, joyful. This concept invites caregivers to recognize children's play not as frivolous distraction but as sacred learning ground equivalent to Rabia's devotional practice. When children engage in imaginative play, they are experimenting with language, testing social roles, and discovering boundaries in states of profound focus. Rather than interrupting this flow with instruction, adults witness and honor it. Language acquisition accelerates when children play without performance anxiety. By protecting and celebrating children's ecstatic absorption in play, caregivers support not just linguistic development but the spiritual dimension of growing into selfhood. This reframes the adult role from director to devotional witness.
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