Intentionally weaving mentors, extended family, and trusted adults into the adolescent's life, recognizing that belonging and healthy identity require more than parents alone.
Rabia lived within a community of spiritual seekers, teachers, and disciples; her legacy was perpetuated through relationship networks, not isolated transmission. Community As Extended Beloved recognizes that adolescent development requires multiple attachment figures and models. While parent-teen relationships are foundational, the normative adolescent task of individuation is better supported when the teen has trusted mentors, coaches, teachers, relatives, and friends who reflect back different versions of possibility. Parents can intentionally cultivate these relationships—perhaps facilitating a meaningful connection with a grandparent, encouraging the teen to work with a mentor in an area of interest, or helping build deep friendships. This reduces unhealthy enmeshment (where the parent expects the teen to meet all their emotional needs) and provides the teen with multiple perspectives on identity, values, and belonging. It also acknowledges that parents cannot be everything to their adolescent child. In Rabia's tradition, the spiritual path was communal and witnessed by others. So too does healthy adolescence unfold within a web of relationships. When a parent says, "I trust you to learn from other wise people in your life," they affirm the teen's emerging autonomy while maintaining parental presence and guidance.
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