Examining motivations for participation as the primary metric of community health, following Rabia's emphasis on ihsan (excellence of intention).
Central to Rabia's teaching was ihsan—excellence of character expressed through purity of intention. She questioned why we love, serve, or belong, insisting that motives be examined and purified. This concept translates to intentional community building by making intention-checking a core practice. Rather than assuming members are present for aligned reasons, communities can create regular spaces to examine: Why am I here? What am I seeking? Am I serving the collective or just myself? This isn't about judgment but honest reflection. Communities that normalize this practice develop greater coherence because members remain aware of their true motivations. When someone recognizes their intention has drifted toward self-interest, they can course-correct or gracefully exit. Rabia's framework suggests that communities thrive when members actively maintain pure intention, making it a community currency more valuable than money or status.
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.