Rabia's concept of ego-annihilation (fana) in divine love reveals how constructed personas prevent authentic belonging; stripping away false identities allows genuine community to form.
In Sufi tradition, Rabia taught that the path to divine love required dissolving the ego—not through self-hatred, but through releasing constructed identities that serve others' comfort rather than truth. When you belong versus fit in, the difference often lies in which self you're presenting. Fitting in means maintaining a curated identity shaped by external expectations; belonging means showing up as your genuine self, even when uncomfortable. Rabia's spiritual practice of stripping away pretense offers a framework for examining which parts of your identity are authentic and which are merely protective masks. This process is paradoxically liberating: as you release the exhausting work of maintaining false selves, you become available for deeper connection with people who can actually know and love you. Communities built on authentic presence rather than performed compatibility have far stronger roots.
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