Cultivating moments of awe and wonder during caregiving routines, recognizing the divine in the ordinary acts of birth and bonding.
Rabia's mystical tradition centered on moments of overwhelming divine connection—states of ecstatic awareness where the veil between material and sacred dissolved. In the context of birth and early bonding, this concept invites caregivers to recognize that feeding, bathing, holding, and witnessing an infant are inherently sacred acts. Rather than treating early care as mundane necessity or anxiety-laden performance, this framework practices seeing the miraculous in the ordinary: the mystery of emergence in a newborn's face, the sacred geometry of connection during breastfeeding, the spiritual transmission happening in eye contact and skin-to-skin contact. When parents approach these moments with reverence rather than distraction or stress, they create neurological conditions for bonding while simultaneously accessing their own spiritual renewal. The infant receives not just physical care but the caregiver's full presence and awe, which registers as profound safety. This transforms the exhausting early weeks into potential moments of transcendence and deeper belonging to something sacred within the parent-child dyad.
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.