Using meditation, prayer, and inner stillness to create safety and capacity for processing generational wounds.
Rabia's nights of prayer and her devotional practice created a sacred container—a safe, centered space where transformation could occur. For those healing intergenerational trauma, contemplative practice serves as a stabilizing ground. When you meditate, pray, or engage in the spiritual practices of Rabia's tradition, you activate the parasympathetic nervous system, creating physiological safety. This allows previously frozen or overwhelming memories and emotions to be processed. The contemplative container also connects you to something larger than family systems—to the sacred, to infinity, to love itself—which relativizes family wounds without dismissing them. Regular practice develops the psychological capacity to feel difficult emotions without being destabilized, to witness family patterns without judgment, and to access the resourcefulness needed for generational healing work.
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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