Children's natural play with language mirrors mystical devotion; treating word experimentation as sacred play deepens learning and honors the child's spiritual curiosity.
Rabia spent her life in devoted worship, finding God in every moment and action. Young children naturally inhabit this state—they are completely absorbed in play, utterly present. When a child repeats a newly-discovered word, giggles at sound patterns, or creates nonsense phrases, they are engaged in devotional play. This concept invites caregivers to witness language play as spiritual practice rather than mere practice drills. Each mispronunciation, each experimental sound, is a prayer of discovery. By honoring the child's linguistic playfulness with full presence and joy, we teach them that curiosity about language and boundaries is sacred. The Rabian lens shows that playful exploration and reverent attention are not separate from learning—they are its heart. This transforms the early childhood language domain from task-oriented into a space of mutual devotion and wonder.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.