Teaching that words are vessels for devotion, and how we speak to and about children becomes their internal voice.
Rabia's poetry expressed love in words that carried spiritual presence. For young children learning language, every utterance from caregivers becomes an internalized voice. The child who hears "I love you, and I'm here to keep you safe" develops a different internal language than one who hears criticism. In play, language boundaries are opportunities for love transmission: "When you use gentle words, I feel close to you." "I hear you're frustrated—let's find words together." Over time, the child's own language reflects this devotion. They learn to speak to themselves with kindness, to others with care. Play conversations—narrating what the child does, reflecting feelings, validating experiences—are acts of love-transmission. The child's emerging language becomes infused with the relational attunement they've absorbed. Language boundaries aren't rules about what words are "bad"; they're invitations into a loving way of speaking that honors self and others. The child internalizes: Words are how we love.
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.