Rabia's capacity to experience joy within sorrow, giving parents permission to hold paradoxical emotions—grief and gratitude, fear and peace—simultaneously.
Rabia lived in poverty and suffering yet spoke of ecstasy, of states beyond the ordinary emotional range. She did not suppress grief or deny difficulty; instead, she entered into a consciousness vast enough to hold multiple truths at once. For parents navigating chronic illness, this teaching is liberating: you do not have to choose between loving your child and grieving the life you expected, between hope and realistic acceptance, between moments of joy and ongoing sorrow. Ecstatic acceptance means deliberately widening your emotional capacity to contain contradictions: to be devastated by the diagnosis and grateful for one good day; to pursue aggressive treatment and practice surrender; to wish fervently for cure and accept the possibility of lifelong illness. Rabia's example shows that this is not spiritual bypassing or insincerity but rather spiritual maturity. By holding opposites consciously, parents escape the exhausting binary thinking that demands constant choosing and instead access a deeper resilience that flows between states rather than rigidly defending one.
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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