Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ecstatic Presence in the Classroom

Rabia's practice of being fully absorbed in devotion illuminates how Montessori and Waldorf teachers can cultivate authentic presence—a quality that transforms classroom energy and deepens children's sense of belonging.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia al-Adawiyya practiced a mystical devotion characterized by complete absorption—losing herself in love of the Divine. This ecstatic presence mirrors the mindfulness both Montessori and Waldorf educators cultivate. When teachers are fully present without distraction or agenda, children experience genuine attention that builds belonging. This presence isn't performative; it's the natural overflow of devotion to the work itself. In Waldorf's rhythmic lessons and Montessori's uninterrupted work cycles, ecstatic presence allows teachers to read children's developmental needs intuitively. Rabia's legacy teaches that the quality of consciousness the adult brings matters more than the specific activity. Children absorb whether adults are merely going through motions or genuinely engaged. Creating space for this presence—through contemplative practice, limited multitasking, and spiritual grounding—helps teachers become the stable, loving witnesses children need to flourish and develop community bonds.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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