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Concept
1 min read

Interbeing: Child and Parent as Mutual Beloveds

Recognizing the reciprocal love between parent and child, where each is transformed through relationship with the other, not a one-directional giving.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Though Rabia lived centuries before contemporary psychology, her framework of mutual devotion anticipates modern understanding of parent-child attunement as reciprocal transformation. Attachment isn't something parents give to passive children; it's a dynamic relationship where both are changed. Your child's smile genuinely moves you; your presence genuinely calms them. When you practice responsive parenting, you're not performing a role but entering genuine relationship where both hearts are engaged. Rabia's beloved—whether understood as God or the divine principle—loved her back; she experienced mutual recognition. Similarly, secure attachment research shows that attuned children genuinely respond to their parent's emotional state, creating feedback loops of love. This mutual belonging dissolves the myth of parental sacrifice—you're not just giving to your child, you're receiving the profound gift of being needed, loved, and transformed by relationship with them. Understanding this mutuality frees parents from martyr narratives and allows authentic engagement. You're not superior bestowing love downward, but fellow travelers mutually awakening to love's transformative power. This interbeing—to borrow from Thich Nhat Hanh—captures Rabia's deepest insight applied to parenting.

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Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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