Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Presence as Discipline and Devotion

Rabia's spiritual discipline reframed: attachment parenting as a rigorous practice requiring training, consistency, and the cultivation of inner resources—not natural instinct.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia's love was not sentiment but discipline—a structured, deliberate daily practice of prayer, remembrance, and presence. Modern attachment parenting often sentimentalizes connection as something you either naturally feel or don't. Rabia's model reframes: presence is a skill, developed through practice. This is both demanding and liberating. It is demanding because it requires you to train your attention, manage your own dysregulation, and show up even when exhausted or ambivalent. It is liberating because it means you need not wait for perfect feelings; you can practice presence as a discipline. A mother who does not naturally enjoy infant care can still develop the attentional practice of meeting her baby with genuine presence. A father uncertain of his parental instincts can train himself in the discipline of attuned response. Rabia's devotion was sustained through daily ritual—recitation, fasting, prayer. Attachment parenting similarly requires structures: consistent routines, daily rituals of connection, practices that anchor presence even when motivation flags. This dignity—treating parenting as a serious discipline requiring training—honors both your effort and your child's need for consistency.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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