Establishing fundamental belonging and worth independent of parental approval, the spiritual foundation for mature forgiveness.
Many of us struggle to forgive parents because we unconsciously believe their failure to love us properly means we are fundamentally unlovable. Rabia's teaching on pure love offers a different path: our belonging originates in the Divine, not in parental recognition. This doesn't minimize childhood wounds; rather, it relocates our sense of self-worth. As adults, we can grieve what we didn't receive while simultaneously claiming our inherent belonging. This spiritual reorientation is necessary for genuine forgiveness—not forgiving because we need parents' love, but forgiving because we are rooted in a larger love that doesn't depend on them. This framework allows us to hold both truths: our parents failed us AND we were always worthy. From this grounded position, we can forgive not to heal the original wound (which requires other work) but as an expression of spiritual maturity and freedom from conditional belonging.
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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