Using spiritual practices and embodied presence to shift consciousness, build deep listening, and access collective wisdom in organizing spaces.
Rabia's influence came partly from her spiritual presence—a quality of deep listening and consciousness that drew people toward transformation. While not all organizers need mystical practice, creating space for presence-based work strengthens organizing. Practices like meditation, circle work, song, storytelling, and silence create conditions where people access deeper wisdom than strategic thinking alone provides. Mystical presence work honors that humans are not purely rational actors and that movements requiring sustained courage need spiritual sustenance. This approach integrates practices from various traditions—prayer, chant, grounding exercises—that help organizers access embodied knowing. Rabia taught that presence to divine love created psychological and spiritual shifts; similar presence work in organizing creates openings for people to imagine liberated futures. Mystical organizing tools also slow down decision-making in healthy ways, ensuring that moves come from collective wisdom rather than reactive urgency. This concept isn't about religiosity but about accessing human capacities—intuition, vision, courage—that pure strategy misses. Presence becomes organizing technology.
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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