Communities thrive when members pursue connection fiercely while simultaneously releasing attachment to outcomes.
Rabia's spiritual path involved passionate seeking of divine love combined with complete surrender—striving and non-striving held in paradox. In community building, this appears as communities that actively cultivate connection while remaining non-attached to who joins or stays. This paradox prevents both stagnation and desperation. A community that doesn't actively invite and welcome people becomes insular; a community that desperately clings to members becomes controlling. The healthy rhythm involves hosting generously—creating appealing gatherings, personally inviting people, removing barriers to entry—while simultaneously accepting that people come and go, that the community's essence doesn't depend on particular individuals staying. This prevents the resentment that arises when organizers feel unappreciated or the guilt members feel when they need to leave. Rabia's model teaches that we can be wholeheartedly committed to building community while holding our attachments lightly. This creates a quality of freedom within commitment: people stay because they choose to, not because they're needed, and they're more likely to stay because they're not trapped.
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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