Regularly documenting and celebrating family members' non-financial contributions to wealth creation, ensuring inheritance recognizes all forms of value.
Rabia's devotion overflowed in gratitude for every manifestation of Divine grace. In family succession, this becomes the practice of gratitude accounting: systematically recognizing and documenting the non-financial contributions that enabled wealth creation. Who sacrificed career for family stability? Who stewarded relationships that enabled business partnerships? Who raised the next generation while others worked? Whose emotional labor held the family together? Traditional succession planning makes these contributions invisible; gratitude accounting makes them explicit. This might mean explicitly honoring family members who contributed differently, documenting oral histories of how wealth was really built, or structuring governance so that different forms of contribution shape decision-making. The practice prevents the common injustice where financial contributors receive recognition while relational, emotional, and spiritual contributions go unacknowledged. When implemented genuinely, gratitude accounting transforms succession conversations from transactional to relational. It recognizes that wealth is always collaborative and that different people contribute differently. This practice honors Rabia's insight that all love is worthy of recognition.
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.