Treating the body-to-body contact of parenting—holding, nursing, co-sleeping—as a spiritual practice that builds neurological and relational safety.
In Rabia's mysticism, proximity to the beloved is essential; distance is suffering. Physical closeness in attachment parenting—carrying infants, sleeping near children, responsive touch—mirrors this spiritual intimacy. The body is not merely a delivery system for caregiving; it is the primary language of early attachment. When a parent holds a crying child close, skin-to-skin contact regulates the child's nervous system while communicating wordlessly: you are safe, you belong to me, I will protect you. Rabia's tradition dignifies the body as a path to the divine; similarly, attachment parenting honors the body as the foundation of emotional security. Co-sleeping, babywearing, and physical affection are not indulgences but essential practices that wire the child's brain for trust and resilience. This framework helps parents resist cultural shame around closeness and reclaim the sacred dimension of their physical presence. The parent becomes a living sanctuary.
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