The practice of releasing inherited identity constructs and survival personas to access authentic being and interrupt trauma-based self-protection.
Rabia spoke of fana—the dissolution of the ego's constructed self in union with the Divine. Intergenerational trauma encodes survival strategies into identity: the caretaker, the peacekeeper, the invisible one, the achiever. These roles protect you in an unsafe family system but become prisons in adulthood. This concept asks: which parts of your identity are genuinely yours, and which are inherited protective structures? By practicing the annihilation of false self—through contemplation, honest reflection, or therapeutic work—you dismantle the persona that once kept you safe but now keeps you separate from authentic connection. This dissolution is generationally significant: children of parents who have released their trauma armor are far more likely to develop genuine selves rather than adaptive ones. You break the cycle by becoming real.
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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