The practice of witnessing and validating your child's emotional experience with the same deep compassion Rabia offered to all beings, without trying to fix or minimize their feelings.
Rabia was known for her radical compassion—she wept for sinners and loved the creation as manifestations of divine beauty. In attachment parenting, the heart's witness means meeting your child's emotions with full recognition and acceptance. When your toddler grieves a lost toy or your older child feels shame, you do not dismiss, correct, or redirect. Instead, you witness: 'I see your sadness. This matters. You matter.' This validation is not permissiveness; it is the foundation of emotional security. Through being witnessed by a attuned caregiver, children develop emotional intelligence and learn that feelings are safe. Rabia's tradition teaches that compassion is not sentimental—it is the deepest form of truth-telling. Your child learns that the full spectrum of human emotion is acceptable, which allows them to develop a secure internal sense of self.
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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