A contemplative practice where you burn away inherited trauma patterns through singular, unwavering commitment to your own spiritual awakening and freedom.
Rabia famously spoke of carrying fire in one hand and water in the other—destroying both paradise and hell to serve God purely. Applied to intergenerational trauma, this metaphor becomes a practice of intentional burnout: releasing the false rewards of family loyalty and the fear of ancestral punishment. The fire represents your commitment to break the cycle, even when it feels like you're destroying the family structure itself. Pure devotion here means choosing your healing above family approval, above the comfort of familiar patterns, above the illusion of belonging-through-suffering. This is radical because it acknowledges that sometimes breaking legacy means letting the old stories burn. Rabia's tradition honors this sacrifice as sacred work. The fire purifies; it doesn't punish. Your devotion to freedom becomes the fuel that transforms generational pain into conscious choice.
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.