A diagnostic framework where parental fear-based parenting (rooted in control and worst-case scenarios) is recognized as the inverse of love, clarifying where parent-teen conflict truly originates.
Rabia taught that fear and love cannot coexist in the same space—they are opposite forces. Fear contracts and controls; love expands and liberates. Many parent-teen dynamics are actually fear-based parenting disguised as concern. A parent controlling a teen's friendships may frame it as protection, but the teen experiences it as distrust. A parent enforcing strict rules may intend safety, but the teen feels unloved. This concept invites honest examination: Is this parental action rooted in love for this teen's becoming, or in parental fear? Fear-based parenting escalates during adolescence because normal teen development (privacy needs, peer orientation, identity exploration) triggers parental anxiety. Rabia's tradition suggests that love means naming fears aloud and working with them honestly, rather than embedding them in control. A parent might say: "I'm afraid for your safety, and I also trust you to make choices." This honesty paradoxically increases teen trust and cooperation. Conversely, hidden fear masquerading as rules creates resentment and secret-keeping.
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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