Reconnecting with authentic personal desire as a spiritual and psychological practice, recovering what trauma taught us to suppress or deny.
Rabia's devotion was characterized by passionate desire—for the Divine, for truth, for authentic connection. Many trauma survivors lose touch with desire altogether, having learned that wanting things (safety, love, rest, pleasure) led to disappointment or punishment. Generational trauma often teaches suppression: want nothing, expect nothing, need nothing. This survival strategy becomes a prison. Desire reclamation is the practice of gradually, gently reconnecting with what you actually want—not what you were taught to want, but what calls to you. What activities make you lose time? What brings delight? What do you deeply need? Initially, this may feel selfish or dangerous, triggering ancestral messages about greed or ingratitude. But desire is the psyche's wisdom—it points toward what nourishes and animates us. By honoring desire rather than crushing it, we interrupt the inherited message that our needs don't matter. This teaches children that their wants are valid, worthy of consideration, and something to act on thoughtfully rather than deny entirely.
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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