Preparing for and navigating the teen's eventual departure while maintaining genuine relational presence and deep affection.
Rabia lived with longing for the divine beloved who remained hidden, absent, beyond reach. She loved across distance and incompleteness. This is the secret knowledge parents must digest during adolescence: your child is already leaving you. The parent-teen relationship is transitional by design. Many parents resist this, clinging to earlier closeness or trying to prevent the separation. Rabia's framework suggests a different way: love your teen as the beloved you will increasingly know from afar. This isn't resigned melancholy—it's a shift in the nature of love. You move from primary caregiver to elder guide, from daily manager to occasional touchstone. The love doesn't diminish; it transforms. This requires the parent to do inner work: What do you receive from parenting that you must now find elsewhere? How do you love someone whose life is increasingly unknown to you? How do you release control while remaining present? Rabia loved the divine she could not see, could not control, could not fully know. Parents of older teens love this version of their child: increasingly autonomous, somewhat unknowable, living their own life. The spiritual practice is blessing their departure while remaining steadfastly available. Love that can hold absence is the love that endures.
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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