A model of family as consciously elected bonds of devotion rather than biological destiny, rooted in Rabia's spiritual community and voluntary commitment.
Rabia lived within a community bound not by blood but by shared spiritual purpose and love. Adoption embodies this same principle: kinship as choice, commitment, and mutual belonging. This concept helps adoptive families reframe their narrative from 'broken' or 'rescued' to 'chosen' and 'intentional.' Unlike biological families formed by chance, adoptive families are created through deliberate devotion and legal covenant. Rabia's model honors this distinction as a strength, not a deficit. The family becomes a community of practice, where belonging is continuously chosen and renewed. For adoptive children, this framework can transform identity: you are not a mistake or an accident, but someone your parents chose before you were even born. This reorients the adoption story from trauma and loss (though those remain real) into a narrative of intentional kinship, where love is both ancient and deliberately constructed.
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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