Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Forgiveness as Freedom, Not Reunion

Understanding forgiveness through Rabia's love as liberation from the hold of resentment, not as reconciliation or trust restoration.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Intergenerational trauma survivors often confuse forgiveness with reconciliation, reunion, or the erasure of harm—creating impossible emotional binds. Rabia's radical love offers a different path: forgiveness as freedom for yourself. Forgiveness is the practice of releasing the other person from your internal court, not inviting them back into your life or certifying them as safe. A parent can forgive their abuser while maintaining firm boundaries, protecting their children from that person. A child can forgive inherited patterns while refusing to repeat them. This distinction is liberating—forgiveness becomes possible precisely because it requires nothing of the other person. It's an internal practice of non-attachment, a releasing of the energy spent on justified grievance. When practiced this way, forgiveness becomes a gift to yourself and to your descendants: you are no longer a conduit for ancestral rage, no longer organizing your life around the person who hurt you. You are free to build something new, and that freedom is the most powerful legacy you can offer.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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