Rabia's mutual love with the divine parallels the dance of attuned responsiveness between parent and child, where each person's needs shape the relational flow.
Rabia's devotion was characterized by intimate dialogue with the divine—a mutual responsiveness and receptivity. In attachment parenting, the parent-child relationship mirrors this sacred reciprocity: the infant cries, the parent responds; the toddler explores, the parent supervises; the child needs comfort, the parent provides it. This responsive rhythm builds neural pathways of trust. When parents tune into their child's cues and respond promptly—especially during infancy—they teach the child that the world is responsive to their needs. Rabia's teaching illuminates how this reciprocity itself is holy work, worthy of full presence. The back-and-forth dance of responsiveness, repeated thousands of times over years, creates the secure internal working model that allows children to feel safe, explore confidently, and eventually internalize their parent's attunement as their own emotional regulation capacity.
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