Rabia's model of embodied spirituality offers parents practical daily rituals and practices that anchor recovery and parental presence in the rhythms of ordinary life.
Rabia's devotion was not abstract theology but lived practice—prayer, service, teaching, and presence woven into each day. For parents in addiction recovery, transformation requires more than insight; it requires daily practice that rewires neural pathways and emotional habits. Devotion to children means showing up for breakfast, asking real questions, listening without fixing, keeping promises in small ways. Devotion to recovery means meeting oneself with compassion through daily practices: meditation, journaling, movement, connection with sponsor or therapist, and moments of deliberate presence. Rabia's life demonstrates that spiritual transformation occurs through the accumulation of small acts of love and intention, performed consistently despite resistance, fatigue, and doubt. These daily practices become the scaffolding of a new identity—not addict or failed parent, but one learning to love, to show up, to gradually transform inherited patterns into new legacies of presence and care for the next generation.
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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