A contemplative approach to children's play where language exploration is honored as sacred experimentation, not misbehavior to be corrected.
Rabia saw all of life as opportunity for communion with the sacred, transforming ordinary moments into devotional practice. In early childhood education, play is how children pray—how they explore meaning, test identity, and commune with their world. When a young child experiments with language through play—rhyming sounds, inventing words, exploring taboo language—they are engaged in sacred work. The caregiver's role is to create conditions for this prayer while gently directing its form. Instead of "Stop making up silly words," try: "I love how you're playing with sounds. Let's also practice the real words for these things." This honors the child's exploration while teaching standard language. Some language testing is prayer; some is boundary-checking. Pure attention helps distinguish. A child who whispers a forbidden word to themselves is exploring power and meaning; one who shouts it at a peer is testing social boundaries. Both deserve witness and guidance, not punishment. When play-language is treated as sacred exploration, children develop reverence for language itself.
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