Rabia's devotion involved surrendering attachment to outcomes; parenting young children means releasing ownership of who they're becoming, trusting their own unfolding language and boundaries.
Rabia's spiritual path demanded release: not clinging to reward, comfort, or even her own plans. Applied to early childhood parenting, this is radical: caregivers must release ownership of the child's language development, personality, and choices. A parent invested in their child achieving certain milestones or adopting certain values unconsciously imposes their will through language and boundary-setting. Rabia would counsel differently: hold the child with open hands, create the conditions for growth, then trust their unfolding. This doesn't mean no structure; rather, it means boundaries emerge from the child's genuine needs and the relationship's integrity, not the adult's agenda. When a child experiments with language—mispronouncing words, inventing grammar, testing social rules—Rabia's non-attachment suggests honoring this as their own knowing rather than rushing to correct. Play becomes a space of discovery, not performance for adult approval. Boundaries set from non-possession look different: "I'm keeping you safe because your life matters" rather than "You must obey me." This Sufi wisdom offers parents release from the anxiety of shaping the child into a predetermined form, freeing them to witness and support the child's own sacred unfolding.
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