Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Heart Learns First

The recognition that emotional and relational learning precedes and forms the foundation for cognitive and linguistic learning.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia privileged the heart as the seat of knowledge—not abstract intellect but embodied wisdom of connection and love. In early childhood development, this means that children first learn through their hearts: through feeling safe, seen, and loved. Only from this emotional foundation can cognitive learning—including language—flourish. A child whose heart feels secure can focus on learning words, sounds, and play patterns. A child whose heart is anxious or disconnected will struggle with language development regardless of how many learning activities are offered. Boundaries taught to the heart—"I keep you safe because I love you"—become internalized values. Boundaries imposed on the intellect alone—"because I said so"—remain external rules that evaporate when supervision ends. In play, a child's heart learns first whether peers are safe, whether the caregiver is trustworthy, whether play is a place of joy or performance. Language follows the heart's lead. The child whose heart has learned "I am beloved" speaks with more ease, creativity, and authenticity than the child still seeking reassurance. This is Rabia's deepest wisdom for early childhood: tend the heart, and all else develops.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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