Rabia's practice of purifying intention ensures caregiving flows from love rather than need for control, approval, or legacy.
Rabia continuously examined and purified her motives, seeking to love God without wanting reward or fearing punishment. This practice applies powerfully to the parent-infant relationship, where unconscious motives profoundly shape the bonding experience. A parent who genuinely examines their motives may discover they nurture their child seeking approval, control, or fulfillment of their own unmet needs. Rabia's framework suggests regular honest inquiry: Am I feeding this child to nourish them, or to manage my anxiety? Am I soothing them because they need comfort, or because their distress threatens my sense of competence? Such inquiry is not guilt-inducing but clarifying. When caregivers purify their motives—releasing agenda and returning to pure presence—the infant feels genuinely held rather than instrumentalized. This creates secure attachment because the child is not burdened with meeting the parent's emotional needs. Rabia's model of continuous intentional purification offers a practice: regular moments of honest reflection on whether your caregiving arises from the infant's needs or your own ego. This discipline transforms the entire relational field, allowing true love to flow.
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