Rabia's ascetic practice of releasing worldly attachments parallels psychological work of releasing protective masks that isolate us from connection.
Rabia practiced extreme asceticism—not as self-punishment but as liberation from attachments that obscure truth. This inward stripping away corresponds to psychological work of recognizing defenses built in response to early loneliness or rejection. Many people develop elaborate protective structures: emotional distance, cynicism, perfectionism, people-pleasing. These defenses once made sense but now maintain isolation. Rabia's path suggests that real belonging requires willingness to be vulnerable, to release the armor we've constructed. This might involve noticing patterns: Do we maintain emotional distance to prevent hurt? Do we perform competence to hide neediness? Do we stay too busy to feel longing? The practice parallels asceticism: gradually releasing what no longer serves us, stripping to essential truth. This creates space for authentic encounter—with others and with ourselves. True connection requires showing up without our usual protective scaffolding, which feels terrifying and is precisely what liberates us from isolation.
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