Creating circles of beloved community that heal not only the addicted parent but actively break cycles of trauma and addiction in children.
Rabia lived within a beloved community that sustained and transformed her. This concept expands recovery beyond the individual parent to the family system: addiction is intergenerational, so healing must be too. The 'beloved community' becomes a deliberate container that includes the recovering parent, their children, mentors, and chosen family. Within this circle, children witness adults who are honest about struggle, who repair relationships, who seek help. This visibility is medicine. Rather than children growing up with secrets and shame, they grow up seeing adults model vulnerability and transformation. Rabia's circles were not exclusive; they welcomed all seekers. Similarly, a healing community for parenting addiction includes people of different backgrounds and struggles, modeling belonging across difference. For children, this means they learn that addiction and recovery are human experiences, not family secrets. They also learn that healing is relational—it happens in connection, not isolation. This framework positions parents' recovery work as the foundation for their children's psychological freedom.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.