Shared yearning and spiritual longing create a deeper bond than shared circumstances, forming community across difference.
Rabia's entire spiritual life was animated by intense longing—for God, for union, for the beloved. This longing was not absence of belonging but the very signature of belonging to something transcendent. She taught that the ache of separation from the Divine is itself a form of connection. Applied to community, this suggests that true belonging often centers on shared longing: for meaning, for justice, for beauty, for growth. These communities of seeking—spiritual sanghas, philosophical circles, creative movements—bind people together across differences in background, status, and personality. Longing is democratic; it doesn't care about fitting in. A billionaire and a pauper can long together. An introvert and extrovert can share yearning. This concept reframes belonging away from sameness toward shared direction. We belong not because we're alike, but because we're reaching toward something together that matters more than our differences. The question becomes: what are you longing for, and who else is reaching in that direction?
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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