Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Presence as the Deepest Gift

Rabia's practice of complete present-moment attention in love offers parents the antidote to addiction's distraction: genuine presence as the healing medicine for damaged attachment.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia was known for her complete, undivided attention—when she loved, spoke, or prayed, her whole being was there. Addiction fragments presence; the addicted brain is always partially elsewhere, chasing the next fix or drowning in consequences. For parenting, fragmented presence is devastating: children interpret parental distraction as rejection. Recovery offers the chance to repair this through presence—not grand gestures or perfect parenting, but simple, consistent attention: eye contact during conversation, putting away the phone, remembering what the child said yesterday, showing up even when tired. Rabia teaches that presence is itself a spiritual practice and the deepest currency of love. A child who experiences genuine parental presence begins to heal from the neglect of active addiction. This presence also strengthens the parent's recovery: connection releases the neurochemicals that oppose craving; engagement in another's life pulls attention away from internal obsession. Rabia's model shows that presence is not effortless but disciplined, requires sacrifice of distraction, and is the truest form of devotion. For both parent and child, it becomes medicine: the greatest gift the recovering parent can offer.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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