Walking with a foster child through loss and separation with the understanding that grief is love expressed over distance.
Rabia experienced ecstatic love of God accompanied by longing and separation—she lived in the tension between union and distance. Foster children and parents navigate similar terrain: genuine love mixed with impermanence, attachment paired with loss. This concept reframes grief not as failure or weakness but as evidence of real love, a spiritual practice that deepens capacity for compassion. When a foster child grieves their birth family or fears another loss, the foster parent who can sit with that grief without trying to fix it or compete with it demonstrates Rabia's wisdom. By offering companionship in sorrow rather than dismissing it, the foster parent honors the child's full emotional and spiritual reality. This normalizes grief as part of love, teaches the child that loss does not invalidate connection, and models how to hold multiple belonging truths at once: loving a foster family while missing and honoring one's origins.
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.