Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Forgiveness as Liberation, Not Reconciliation

Practicing Rabia's compassionate release of resentment toward ancestors and family, freeing yourself from trauma's emotional grip without requiring relationship repair.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia's love extended even to those who persecuted her; she held no grudges because her heart was oriented toward the Divine rather than injury. In intergenerational trauma, forgiveness is often demanded prematurely, collapsing the work needed to heal. True forgiveness, as Rabia models it, is different: it is your internal liberation from the grip of rage and betrayal, undertaken not for the ancestor's benefit but for yours. You can forgive your mother for her coldness while never reconciling with her. You can release the grip of 'she owed me better' without pretending the harm didn't happen. This forgiveness is radical self-compassion—you're releasing the exhausting work of holding resentment, which keeps you psychologically fused to the trauma. As you forgive (internally, without necessarily telling anyone), you discover that the energy once used for grievance becomes available for joy, creativity, and genuine connection with those you choose.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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