The practice of releasing ego, expectation, and control to meet the infant in radical availability and presence.
Rabia al-Adawiyya famously rejected both fear of hell and desire for heaven, seeking only God's presence. This radical stripping away translates powerfully to early parenting. Birth strips caregivers of pretense: sleeplessness, bodily vulnerability, and constant interruption dissolve the protective self. Rather than resist this dissolution, Rabia's path embraces it as clarification. The concept invites caregivers to release fantasies of the 'perfect parent,' the infant's 'ideal' trajectory, and the need to be anything other than present. When a caregiver attends to their infant's cry without agenda, without performing competence, without seeking validation, they practice Rabia's pure devotion. This stripping away creates spaciousness—the infant experiences being met, not managed. Early bonding becomes contemplative rather than instrumental, allowing both caregiver and child to discover authentic connection beneath social conditioning.
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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