A practice of speaking and listening that confirms the other person's reality, separate from judgment—the foundation of true community.
Rabia's spiritual legacy includes the practice of witnessing: seeing and naming the reality of another without trying to fix, judge, or change them. In community, the language of witness is revolutionary. Most conversations operate within the logic of fitting in: you present a curated self, others react, you adjust. The language of witness interrupts this cycle. It is simply: I see you. Your experience is real. Your struggle matters. This creates belonging by affirming existence itself, not behavior or achievement. When someone feels witnessed, they relax the mask. They stop performing. They become capable of genuine connection. Rabia's teachings on love emphasize this seeing quality—her devotion was a form of radical attention. In practical terms, this means listening without immediately solving, naming what you observe without judgment, and reflecting back what you hear. Communities that practice witnessing transform belonging from a commodity you earn into a condition you share. Ask: Who witnesses me? Whom do I witness?
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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