Rabia's sense of belonging to the Divine community offers parents a counter-narrative to the isolation that fuels addiction and estrangement from family.
Rabia taught that the human soul belongs first to God and the community of believers—a belonging that precedes and enables all other connections. For addicted parents, the disease often severs belonging: isolation increases craving, and addiction deepens alienation from spouse, children, and community. This concept invites parents to recognize that recovery begins with reconnecting to something larger than themselves—whether spiritual tradition, support community, or the sacred dimension of family. By establishing this primary belonging, parents become less vulnerable to the false belonging offered by addiction. Rabia's framework shows that when we remember we are part of a loving cosmos, we are less likely to seek escape or numbness. For children, watching a parent move from isolation toward genuine community belonging is profoundly healing. It teaches them that humans are made for connection, and that recovery is a return home to what we fundamentally are.
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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