The practice of offering undivided, loving attention to a child's speech and play, modeling the quality of presence that Rabia demonstrated in her devotion to the divine.
Rabia al-Adawiyya's spiritual practice centered on pure, undistracted love and attention toward God. Translated to early childhood language development, this becomes a framework for adult presence: giving children the gift of complete, non-judgmental attention during play and conversation. When a caregiver listens to a three-year-old's rambling story with genuine interest—not correcting pronunciation, not waiting to redirect—the child experiences being truly heard. This models and enables reciprocal attention in peer play. Children learn from this quality of presence how to listen, how to value another's expression, how to hold space for emerging thoughts and words. Rabia's teachings suggest that this pure attention is a form of love, and love is contagious. A child who receives such attentive listening develops confidence in their own language-making and learns to offer similar attention to others. The boundary-work of play (turn-taking, listening to peers' ideas) becomes natural extension of having been fully attended to.
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