Periagoge
Concept
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Burning Away Ego in Family Conflict

A practice of using parent-teen disputes as opportunities for ego-purification rather than battles to be won.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia spoke of burning away the self in love's fire—dissolving the ego's claims and defenses through surrender. Parent-teen conflict often escalates because both parties protect their identity and pride. This concept offers an alternative: what if parents approached disagreement as an invitation to examine their own defensive structures? When a teen argues about curfew, dress, or friend choices, instead of mobilizing arguments to win, a parent practicing this principle asks: What am I defending? What does my need to control reveal about my own fears? This shifts conflict from contest to mutual inquiry. It requires the parent to be vulnerable first—to admit uncertainty, acknowledge the teen's legitimate perspective, and tolerate their own discomfort without demanding the teen soothe it. Rabia's radical acceptance of suffering as purification becomes a tool for parents to transform frustration into compassion, creating space for actual dialogue rather than power struggle.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
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