The practice of releasing control and preconception to meet each infant as a unique, unknowable being.
Rabia taught surrender to divine will—releasing attachment to predetermined outcomes and meeting reality with open receptivity. For birth and early bonding, surrender means parents release fantasies about who the child "should" be and instead meet the actual infant arriving. Each baby is distinct in temperament, needs, sensitivities, and personality. Control-oriented parenting rooted in books, expert advice, or family patterns often conflicts with this particular child's true nature. Rabia's model suggests approaching infancy with beginner's mind: What does this baby need? How does this child communicate? What soothes this unique person? This surrender requires humility and trust. The parent becomes responsive rather than prescriptive, following the infant's lead in feeding pace, sleep patterns, and rhythms of engagement. Paradoxically, this surrender creates more secure attachment than controlling approaches. Infants whose actual nature is met—not forced into predetermined templates—develop trust in their own signals and bodily knowing. They learn: my needs matter; my unique way of being is acceptable. This early experience of being met as oneself becomes the foundation for authentic belonging and the capacity to show up honestly in all future relationships.
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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