Actively reconstructing a sense of safe belonging after ancestral exclusion, abandonment, or conditional acceptance.
Rabia's community was her chosen family—essential because formal systems often excluded women and the poor. Intergenerational trauma frequently damages the capacity to feel genuinely belonged: your ancestors may have been displaced, rejected, or marginalized, and you inherit that wound as a core sense of not-belonging. Reclamation work is intentional: seeking communities that welcome your whole self, practicing being seen and held, risking vulnerability with trustworthy people. It means examining which relationships replicate ancestral rejection and consciously building new relational patterns. Rabia's example shows that belonging is not granted by institutions but created in circles of mutual recognition. This work is how you break the transmission of exile and establish a different inheritance for those who come after.
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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