The collective responsibility of family and community to hold and support the newborn and birthing parent.
Rabia lived within a community of seekers; her love was expressed individually but held within collective spiritual structures. For birth and early bonding, this concept recognizes that infants thrive within concentric circles of care: immediate family, extended kinship, and community witnesses. The "sacred container" means the community actively participates in welcoming the newborn—through presence, practical support, spiritual acknowledgment, and shared responsibility. Modern isolation of nuclear families often places unsustainable pressure on two parents. Rabia's model suggests that robust early bonding requires a village consciously organized around the infant's arrival. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, friends, and mentors share in the sacred work of early care. This distribution of love and labor creates resilience; the infant experiences multiple secure relationships simultaneously. The community container also protects the birthing parent, acknowledging the vulnerability and transformation they undergo. When early bonding happens within an engaged community, infants develop secure attachment to multiple caregivers and a felt sense of belonging to something larger than the nuclear family.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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