A spiritual practice framework where healing trauma is approached as sacred work—an act of devotion to truth, love, and generational freedom.
Rabia's healing was inseparable from her devotion—she didn't distinguish between spiritual practice and life work. Applying this to intergenerational trauma means approaching your healing not as a problem to solve quickly, but as sacred work worthy of devotion. This reframes therapy, journaling, meditation, and difficult conversations not as obligations or weakness, but as profound acts of love. You show up to your healing the way Rabia showed up to prayer: with full presence, with commitment, with the understanding that this matters not just for you but for generations. Devotional healing work also means being gentle with yourself in the process. You're not trying to become perfect; you're trying to become conscious. You're not erasing pain; you're transforming your relationship to it. This framework honors the depth and difficulty of generational healing while connecting it to something transcendent—the possibility that your work ripples outward, that your freedom makes freedom possible for others, that your love becomes ancestral medicine.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.