Practicing full-hearted devotion to the newborn while releasing anxious protection, mortality awareness, and catastrophic thinking that fragment bonding.
Rabia famously said she loved God not from fear of hellfire but from pure love. Love without fear of loss applies this radical faith to early parenting: bonding fully while releasing the anxiety-driven hypervigilance that modern parenting culture normalizes. New parents are flooded with dangers—real and imagined—creating a state of chronic fear that paradoxically weakens the bond. Rabia's teaching suggests that genuine love requires trust in life's unfolding, even mortality's reality. This does not mean ignoring safety but releasing the illusion of total control. Practically, this framework helps parents distinguish between reasonable precautions and anxiety-based restriction. It permits parents to let infants experience age-appropriate risk, to sleep without constant monitoring, and to trust in resilience rather than fragility. For postpartum parents especially, love without fear of loss is a spiritual practice that restores joy and presence. Rabia's example shows that the deepest bonding emerges not from protective obsession but from a spacious love that trusts both the child's resilience and the universe's fundamental goodness.
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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