Centering the child's own spiritual and emotional development, not the parent's narrative of rescue or completion.
Rabia's devotion was always oriented toward the Beloved—never toward herself or her own salvation through the relationship. This principle is critical for adoptive parents because adoption narratives often center the parent's need to build a family, complete their identity, or perform rescue. Rabia's teaching demands a radical reorientation: the child is not here to fulfill your story; you are here to support theirs. This means listening to your child's actual experience of adoption—including loss, grief, and identity questions—rather than insisting on gratitude or a neat redemption arc. It means recognizing that your child may need to search for biological roots, and that this search is not a rejection of you but their own sacred journey. When you center the beloved's path, you become a true parent: a guide, witness, and protector of another person's unfolding purpose.
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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