Understanding parental love as steadfast presence through disagreement and disappointment, not contingent on agreement or approval, modeled on Rabia's unshakeable devotion.
Rabia's devotion to the divine persisted through doubt, suffering, and seemingly unanswered prayers—she remained devoted not because she got what she wanted but because love itself was the practice. Adolescence naturally brings conflict: disagreement about values, choices, curfews, identity expressions, future plans. Parents often withdraw or escalate when faced with teen resistance. This concept invites parents to practice devotion through conflict—remaining present, curious, and committed to the relationship even during disagreement. This means arguing without contempt, maintaining affection even when boundaries are enforced, and remembering that the relationship transcends any single issue. Practically, it looks like: returning to conflict after cooling down, apologizing for harshness while maintaining necessary limits, demonstrating that love survives disagreement. The teen learns that family bonds are robust enough to contain conflict. They don't have to choose between authenticity and belonging. Over time, this consistency builds profound trust. The teen internalizes that they are loved not for compliance but for existence, that their value doesn't depend on parental approval, and that mature relationships involve both honesty and commitment to staying present through difference.
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