Rabia's compassionate presence without rescue reflects the mature parental skill of being with a teen's struggle without solving it, honoring their agency.
One of Rabia's spiritual practices was witnessing others' suffering with compassion but without the urge to rescue or correct. She understood that spiritual growth required struggle and choice. Many parents in adolescence fall into the trap of over-function: solving problems, mediating conflicts, preventing consequences. While protection is needed, over-intervention prevents the teen from developing resilience, discernment, and ownership of their path. Rabia's model invites parents to develop the capacity to sit with their teen's pain—academic failure, friendship conflict, romantic heartbreak, identity confusion—without immediately fixing it. This means: 'I see you're struggling. I'm here. I believe in your capacity to work through this.' It is the gift of being witnessed, fully, without judgment or urgency to change the moment. Paradoxically, this patient presence often catalyzes the teen's own movement better than intervention. The teen internalizes: my parent trusts me; I am capable; I am not alone in this.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.