The role of the caregiver as a compassionate observer who honors each stage of a child's unfolding development.
Rabia lived as a witness to the divine presence in all things. In early childhood, the caregiver serves as witness to the child's becoming—not rushing development, not comparing to others, but honoring each small emergence of speech, movement, understanding, and play. This witnessing is active: the caregiver notices, names, celebrates. "You said a new word!" "You found a way to share!" When a child struggles with a boundary, the witness doesn't shame but acknowledges: "That was hard. You're learning." This stance is radically different from judgment or correction alone. A child who feels witnessed develops confidence in their own unfolding. Their language becomes richer because they're not performing for approval but expressing authentic experience. In group play, children who have been witnessed learn to witness others—to celebrate peers' accomplishments and recognize their feelings. Boundaries are learned as part of a natural developmental journey, not as failures. This perspective transforms how caregivers and children together navigate the complex terrain of early childhood.
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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