Teaching children language for emotions and experiences they cannot yet articulate, naming what's hidden within.
Rabia spoke of divine love that transcends words and understanding. Paradoxically, this informs a crucial early childhood practice: helping children name feelings and experiences that exist below language. Young children experience complex emotions—grief, shame, joy, longing—without words to contain them. When caregivers gently name these inner states ('I see you're missing your mom,' 'that was scary for you,' 'you feel proud of yourself'), they perform an act of profound love. Language becomes a way of honoring the child's full inner life. This practice prevents emotion from crystallizing as behavioral problem and instead transforms it into relational material. It teaches children that all feelings are speakable, that belonging includes the unspeakable parts of self. In play language development, this creates permission for vulnerability and authenticity—children learn they can express not just facts but the deep, wordless dimensions of being human.
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