Rabia's rejection of reward-and-punishment theology models how secure children seek connection, not compliance validation.
Rabia famously rejected the framework of serving God to gain Paradise or escape Hell, seeking instead pure intimacy with the Divine. This radical reorientation has profound implications for attachment parenting. Many parenting systems unconsciously condition children to perform for approval, creating anxious attachment where the child's primary motivation becomes external validation rather than authentic connection. Rabia's path suggests that children internalize security when parents pursue relationship for its own sake, not as a tool for behavioral control. A securely attached child doesn't primarily aim to please the parent to earn love; instead, they feel fundamentally loved and therefore develop intrinsic motivation, integrity, and authentic self-expression. Parents practicing this shift away from reward systems toward relational depth create space for genuine intimacy. The child experiences being known and valued for who they are, not for what they accomplish. This transforms the parent-child dynamic from transactional to covenantal: a bond based on presence, mutual recognition, and belonging rather than performance metrics and conditional worth.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.