Creating safe internal and external spaces where old wounds can be held with tenderness, witnessed by love rather than judgment or urgency to fix.
Rabia taught that the heart is a container for divine love, and that love transforms everything it touches. The Beloved Container applies this to trauma work: you create—internally through self-compassion practice, externally through safe relationships or therapy—a container where your trauma and your family's trauma can exist without being pathologized or rushed. Traditional trauma recovery can focus on symptom elimination, but intergenerational work requires something else: a space where you can hold your own pain and your parents' pain simultaneously, where you can be angry at inherited patterns and still love the people who carried them. This container is built through practices like internal family systems, somatic experiencing, or simply compassionate witnessing with a trusted person. It's the opposite of the family systems you may have grown up in, where emotions had to be managed quickly, hidden, or weaponized. The Beloved Container allows healing to unfold at its own pace, held in love rather than driven by urgency.
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.