Viewing your child as a reflection that reveals your own values, biases, and the gap between cultural scripts and authentic selfhood.
In Rabia's devotional poetry, the Beloved (the Divine) serves as a mirror revealing the lover's true self—stripped of pretense and social armor. Parenthood offers this same mirror: your child's questions, resistance, and authentic self-expression reflect back to you where cultural expectations have colonized your own identity. When your child rejects a tradition you were raised to enforce, or embraces a path that defies family norms, they become a mirror showing you the cost of unconditional compliance. Rather than fighting this reflection, Rabia's wisdom suggests receiving it with curiosity. What does your defensive reaction reveal about your own unexamined conformity? What values do you actually hold versus those you inherited? This practice transforms parenting friction into spiritual work, where cultural conflict becomes an invitation to know yourself more truthfully and to model authenticity for your child.
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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