Honoring the natural sorrow of changing relationships with adult children as a profound spiritual practice, not a sign of failure.
Rabia's love was inseparable from longing and absence. Parents of adult children grieve—the loss of daily presence, the child who needed them, the family configuration of earlier seasons. This grief is not weakness or poor adjustment; it is the measure of how deeply you loved. Rabia teaches that suffering and love are not opposites but intertwined. When your adult child moves away, makes different choices, or creates distance, you may feel profound sadness. Rather than pathologizing this as 'empty nest syndrome' or abandoning the relationship, meet this grief as you would meet prayer—as an acknowledgment of what mattered and still matters. This grief-as-devotion softens the harshness of separation and transforms it into a different kind of intimacy.
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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