The capacity to be fully present with others while maintaining an inner solitude—the spiritual independence that allows authentic belonging.
Rabia spent years in solitary devotion yet maintained profound relationships; she modeled a belonging that doesn't require loss of self. The paradox matters: fitting in often means surrendering solitude, becoming porous to group opinion, losing the inner sanctuary. True belonging allows both—the ability to be in community and simultaneously maintain an untouched inner life. This is the distinction between enmeshment (fitting in taken to extremity) and authentic connection. The practice is developing what Buddhists call "inner refuge"—a spiritual center that doesn't depend on group validation. From this grounded solitude, you engage community from wholeness rather than hunger. Rabia's legacy shows that the most devoted community members are often those who've cultivated deep inner lives. They belong precisely because they're not desperately seeking belonging. In modern terms: healthy boundaries, meditation practice, solitary reflection—these aren't selfish; they're the foundation of genuine community participation.
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