The practice of transmitting ancestral wisdom not through instruction alone but through daily embodied devotion to inherited sacred ways.
Rabia's life was not about theorizing divine love but living it moment to moment, breath to breath. Similarly, Indigenous coming-of-age traditions transmit legacy not primarily through storytelling or teaching but through initiates witnessing elders' embodied devotion to sacred practices. A young person learns ceremony not just by learning steps but by feeling the elder's genuine love and reverence in each gesture. Legacy becomes alive—a living thing—when youth see their grandmothers' hands knowing the plants, their grandfathers' voices knowing the songs, their community's bodies knowing the dances. This is devotion as inheritance. When coming-of-age ceremonies require initiates to fast, dance, or stay awake through the night, they are not merely enduring hardship; they are practicing the same devotion their ancestors practiced, creating continuity across time. Their growing capacity to show up fully—body, heart, spirit—becomes their gift back to the lineage and their legacy forward to those who will come after.
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