Rabia's disciplined spiritual practice as a template for building routine, ritual, and accountability into parenting and recovery.
Rabia's devotional life was structured: consistent prayer, contemplation, and community practice. Structure is not rigid control; it is the container that allows freedom and presence. Addiction often thrives in unstructured time and emotional chaos. Recovery requires new patterns: daily practices that anchor sobriety and rebuild the parent-child relationship. This might include morning meditation, mealtimes without screens, bedtime rituals, or weekly family check-ins. These are not punitive rules but devotional acts—small ceremonies of care and connection. For a child, predictable parental presence is neurologically calming and trust-building. Rabia's framework suggests that devotion to recovery is devotion to the people we love. The parent who commits to daily practices (therapy, meetings, exercise, prayer, time with their child) is not being rigid; they are being tender. Each practice is an act of love toward their child and themselves.
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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