The cultivation of patience in the face of your child's slowness, resistance, and need for repetition, framed as a spiritual practice of devotional attention rather than mere tolerance.
Rabia's spiritual practice required patience—sitting in prayer, waiting, listening, repeating sacred phrases. She understood patience not as gritting your teeth but as active presence. In attachment parenting, patience is the willingness to slow down to your child's pace. A toddler who needs to practice putting on shoes seventeen times, a school-age child who asks the same question repeatedly, a teenager who needs to tell you the same story twice—these are not obstacles to endure but opportunities for devotion. When you can meet these moments with genuine presence rather than internal frustration, you teach your child that their pace is acceptable, their needs are valued, and they are not a burden. This patience builds attunement and trust. Rabia's framework reframes patience as an act of love, not sacrifice. It is how you say, 'I am here with you, fully, at your speed.' This creates the safety from which secure attachment grows.
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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