A contemplative practice where the parent sees the adolescent as a separate beloved entity, enabling both to recognize and appreciate their distinct identities.
In Rabia's spiritual poetry, the beloved (God) functions as a mirror through which the lover discovers their own depths and truth. Applied to parent-teen dynamics, this concept reframes the adolescent not as an extension of parental identity or a project to complete, but as a separate beloved being worthy of genuine curiosity. Parents practicing this approach ask: "Who is this person becoming?" rather than "Is this person becoming who I want?" This shift is transformative during adolescence, when teens desperately need adults who see them, not their potential or their failures. The parent becomes a witness rather than a judge. For teenagers, knowing they are truly seen—in their contradictions, struggles, and emerging selfhood—validates their individuation process. Rabia's devotional intimacy, stripped of ego-projection, models how parents can maintain close bonds while honoring adolescent autonomy. This practice dissolves the common parent-teen dynamic of misrecognition and enables genuine relational depth.
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