An understanding that adolescent peer-seeking, social performance, and identity experimentation reflect a spiritual hunger to be recognized and chosen—a sacred longing that parents can honor.
Central to Rabia's teaching is the soul's longing to be beloved, to matter utterly to the Divine. Adolescents experience an analogous longing: they desperately need to know they are recognized, chosen, special—not just to parents (whose love feels obligatory) but to peers, to the world, to themselves. Much adolescent behavior—social climbing, aesthetic performance, risk-taking—stems from this beloved-seeking. Parents often pathologize it as vanity or peer pressure. This concept invites parents to see beneath the behavior to the sacred need: the teen seeking confirmation that they are real, worthwhile, visible. This recognition need is not a problem to solve but a reality to honor. Parents serve best by: (1) continuing to genuinely recognize the teen's emerging self; (2) not shaming the peer-seeking as betrayal; (3) helping the teen distinguish between authentic self-expression and desperate performance; (4) understanding that some "mistakes" are experiments in identity, not character flaws. The teen's longing to be beloved will find expression—better it find healthy channels through parental respect than entirely through peer validation or risky performance.
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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