Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Community Care as Extended Family

A model of belonging that distributes parental care and support across community networks rather than centering on the parent-child dyad.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia lived in community—her relationships with other devotees, with students, with seekers created a web of mutual care and accountability. She didn't exist in isolation with one person but within a larger spiritual family. Parents can learn from this that their adult child's wellbeing isn't solely their responsibility; it's supported by community. This reframes the parent-adult child relationship from primary caregiver to one meaningful connection among many. Parents might encourage their adult children toward mentors, friends, therapists, spiritual teachers, and chosen family who can offer different kinds of support. This takes pressure off the parent-child relationship—you don't need to be everything your child needs. It also builds resilience; your child has multiple sources of wisdom, support, and belonging. Parents themselves benefit by building their own community of peers, purpose, and connection, ensuring they don't over-depend on adult children for meaning or companionship. This model, rooted in Rabia's communal spirituality, recognizes that healthy adult relationships exist within wider circles of care and interdependence rather than as isolated dyads.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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