Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Sacred Ordinary: Holy Moments in Daily Care

The recognition that routine caregiving tasks—feeding, bathing, soothing—are sacred acts of devotion and spiritual practice, not mere maintenance.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia lived a life of poverty and hardship, yet experienced every moment as permeated with divine presence. She did not distinguish between spiritual practice and daily life; both were expressions of love. This wisdom revolutionizes how we understand birth and early bonding by elevating ordinary caregiving to sacred status. Changing a diaper, singing a lullaby, responding to a cry—these repetitive tasks can feel mundane, even burdensome. Yet through Rabia's lens, they become acts of devotion equivalent to prayer. When a caregiver approaches these moments with presence and love rather than distraction or resentment, the infant absorbs a profound message: your existence is worthy of sacred attention. This reframe has psychological power; research confirms that responsive caregiving in routine moments—not grand gestures—builds secure attachment. Rabia teaches that no act of love is too small; every tender touch, every patient moment is witnessed by the divine. Parents who internalize this perspective experience less burnout because they recognize the spiritual significance of what might otherwise feel like thankless labor. The infant, held with reverence during ordinary care, develops a sense of fundamental worthiness.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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