Rabia's absolute trust in Divine wisdom parallels trusting a child's innate wisdom and developmental unfolding, moving beyond over-management.
Rabia's faith was radical trust—not blind, but rooted in witnessing the Divine's perfect intelligence in all things. Applied to attachment parenting, this becomes the practice of trusting the child's own rhythms, instincts, and developmental wisdom rather than imposing externally-driven timelines and interventions. Modern parenting often reflects anxiety about the child's adequacy, leading to over-scheduling, over-correcting, and over-monitoring. Rabia's stance suggests a different posture: the parent as guardian of conditions that allow the child's inherent nature to unfold. This doesn't mean permissiveness or absence of boundaries; it means distinguishing between genuine safety concerns and neurotic control. A child left to play without constant direction discovers their own creativity. A child trusted with age-appropriate challenges develops resilience. When parents embody radical trust—rooted in spiritual confidence in the child's nature—they create the safety necessary for secure attachment and authentic development.
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