Creating emotional closeness while maintaining clear boundaries, so your teen feels genuinely part of the family system while developing autonomous selfhood.
Rabia's love was radical but never dissolved the boundary between lover and Beloved; the relationship existed in that sacred space between. Many families oscillate between enmeshment (losing the teen's separate identity) and detachment (emotional distance masquerading as independence). Healthy belonging requires both: your teen knows they are intrinsically valued, their struggles matter to you, and you are invested in their flourishing—AND they know you have your own inner life, your own partnership or friendships, your own growth that is not contingent on them. This boundary is not rejection; it is reality. When a parent says, "I can't be your best friend because I'm your parent and sometimes I need to do what's best for you even if you're upset," this is an act of love rooted in truth. Your teen can then develop peer friendships, tolerate healthy conflict with you, and eventually separate without guilt or abandonment fear because belonging was never contingent on proximity or agreement.
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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