Freeing parental identity from teen's choices and outcomes, allowing deeper seeing of the adolescent's true self.
Rabia taught that attachment to ego—to being seen as righteous, powerful, or successful—separates us from divine reality. Parents often unconsciously use their teens to fulfill unmet needs: parental pride, legacy, validation. This clouded vision prevents seeing the teen as they actually are. When a parent can release the need for their teen to be a particular way—successful, obedient, conventional—they see more clearly. Adolescence is precisely when teens need this kind of space to discover who they authentically are. If parents are too invested in outcomes or image, teens either rebel or conform inauthentically. Rabia's detachment wasn't coldness; it was radical clarity that allowed love to be pure. When parents practice ego-detachment, they notice their teen's genuine gifts, struggles, and emerging identity without filtering through their own fears or desires. This creates psychological space for the adolescent to experiment, fail, and develop authentic selfhood. The parent-teen relationship becomes less about parental stakes and more about witnessing the teen's unfolding humanity.
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