Rabia's teaching of love as spiritual practice transforms play into the primary arena where children practice connection, language, and community inclusion.
For Rabia, love was not sentiment but active practice—a disciplined cultivation of presence and devotion. Applied to early childhood, play becomes the practice arena where children rehearse love, connection, and belonging. Through play between ages 3-6, children practice language in safe relationship: calling out to friends, negotiating roles, telling stories, and resolving conflicts through words. Each play interaction is a micro-practice in the larger art of loving community participation. When caregivers and peers engage in play with the quality of Rabia's devotion—full presence, acceptance, and authentic joy in the other's existence—children internalize that relationship and language are spiritual practices worthy of their full attention and creativity. Play becomes neither frivolous nor merely developmental but sacred practice in belonging. In this frame, language acquisition is simultaneously community-building and love-practice, with each word and interaction strengthening the child's capacity for presence, understanding, and connection across boundaries.
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