Practicing undivided attention with parents as a way to fulfill both Rabia's call for presence and Confucian filial duty.
Rabia's spiritual path centered on absolute presence before the Beloved—a quality of undivided awareness that transforms relationship. In Confucian filial piety, this translates into a specific practice: full, unmediated presence with aging or vulnerable parents. Not attendance out of duty, but presence as love. This means phones set aside, distractions surrendered, hearts genuinely open to the particular person before you. Through such presence, we experience the deep belonging that both traditions prize—we become rooted in the particular relationships that form us, and parents feel truly seen and valued. This practice also serves as preparation for mortality; it honors the finite time we share. Rabia's insistence on immediate, unguarded connection with the Divine becomes, here, an insistence on genuine presence with those who gave us life.
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