The spiritual principle that losing yourself in transcendent love paradoxically creates the deepest sense of belonging and home.
Rabia taught fana—dissolution of the individual self into divine unity—yet this obliteration is experienced as ultimate belonging rather than loss. This paradox penetrates the fitting-in versus belonging distinction: when you're trying to belong, you're defending a self. But when you surrender to what genuinely calls you—whether a cause, community, or truth—the anxious self-protective posture dissolves. This doesn't mean losing boundaries or becoming a doormat; rather, it means releasing the tight grip of ego-based self-presentation. When belonging becomes large enough to contain you, when community purpose feels bigger than personal agenda, the exhausting work of fitting in becomes irrelevant. You're no longer performing; you're participating in something that already has a place for your specific gifts. This concept invites exploration: What am I defending by trying to fit in? What would belonging feel like if I released that defense? Rabia's radical love shows belonging as liberation, not constraint.
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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