Rabia's vision of hidden divine presence and interconnection, applied to seeing how countless unseen supports—medical, spiritual, communal—hold the ill child and parent in an invisible web.
Rabia often spoke of invisible divine presence woven through creation, connecting all beings in relationship to the sacred. For parents of chronically ill children, this vision extends to the actual invisible infrastructure that sustains their child's life: the nurse who studies the child's patterns at night, the ancestor whose genetic gift included both strength and vulnerability, the researcher whose decades-old work led to the current medication, the friend who prays without saying so, the pharmacist who catches the dangerous interaction, the parent's own body and will showing up day after day. These invisible threads of care form a web that holds the child. Rabia teaches the practice of perceiving this interconnection, of gratitude for the seen and unseen, of understanding that no one—not the parent, not the child—lives in isolation but always already embedded in relationship. This perception shifts the parent from feeling alone to recognizing they are held within a vast network of care. The practice involves regularly remembering these invisible threads: the supply chain that brings medicine, the history of love that made the parent capable of this devotion, the future healers being born. Seeing these connections does not eliminate suffering but transforms isolation into communion.
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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