A framework where community reflects your growth and authenticity rather than judges your conformity—a practice Rabia embodied through her devoted circle.
Rabia gathered around her a circle of seekers who witnessed her journey without demanding she perform their expectations. This model—witness circle versus audience—fundamentally redefines community's role. In fitting-in dynamics, community functions as an audience judging your performance: Are you hitting their marks? Meeting their standards? Do you pass? A witness circle, by contrast, sees you. These people recognize your values, struggles, growth, and essential nature. They hold up a mirror showing you your authenticity reflected back. This shifts belonging from external evaluation to mutual recognition. Building a witness circle requires intentional practices: vulnerability, reciprocal seeing, shared inquiry into what matters. Unlike fitting in—which can happen in large groups through performance—belonging through witnessing tends toward smaller, intentional communities. Rabia's students weren't required to conform to a single way; they shared devotion and genuine inquiry. For modern practice, identify who in your life mirrors your authentic self without judgment. Deepen those relationships. Simultaneously, release energy spent performing for audiences. The distinction is felt immediately.
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