Rabia's intense emotional devotion teaches that naming and honoring feelings—not suppressing them—is the deepest language children can learn.
Rabia's love was passionate, complex, and fully felt—she did not hide or minimize emotion. For young children ages 3-6, this is transformative: emotional language is sacred language. As children develop language boundaries, they are learning which emotions are 'allowed' and how to express them. Rabia's tradition invites caregivers to honor all emotions as worthy of expression. A child can say 'I'm angry' or 'I'm sad' or 'I'm afraid' without shame. The boundary becomes not 'don't feel' but 'express your feelings in ways that respect others.' This requires rich emotional vocabulary and permission to feel deeply. When children learn emotional literacy—nuanced language for their inner experience—they develop psychological resilience and authentic self-expression. Language boundaries become tools for emotional maturity, not emotional suppression. This honors Rabia's legacy of feeling deeply and loving fully.
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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