Understanding how external rejection or marginalization can deepen your sense of true belonging within a larger spiritual or principle-based community.
Rabia lived as an outsider—a freed slave, a woman rejecting marriage and domestic roles, a mystic defying orthodoxy—yet described herself as profoundly at home. The Exile's Homecoming reframes marginalization not as permanent rejection but as clarification of where you truly belong. When you're pushed to the edges of a community for not fitting its expectations, you discover whether that community's belonging was conditional or true. Rabia's exclusion from conventional paths opened her to a deeper circle: other seekers, spiritual teachers, and ultimately the Divine itself. This is not romanticizing hardship but recognizing its clarifying function. Modern application: if you feel you don't fit into your family, professional field, or social circle, this may indicate you're called elsewhere. The pain of exile becomes the map toward genuine belonging. Rabia's life demonstrates that the deepest belonging often requires first being cast out from the superficial.
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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