Recognizing the adolescent phase as inherently loss-filled, and helping both parent and teen metabolize grief into deepened empathy and connection.
Rabia's mysticism was rooted in profound loss—she endured poverty, rejection, and suffering, which she transmuted into compassionate love for all beings. Adolescence is a series of griefs: loss of childhood, loss of parental primacy, loss of simplicity, loss of unconditional belonging. Both teen and parent experience this. The parent grieves the child they knew; the teen grieves the self they were. In Rabia's tradition, grief is not pathology but doorway. When parents can hold their own grief about their child's separation—the necessary individuation that feels like rejection—they access compassion for their teen's parallel grief about becoming autonomous. An adolescent angry at their parent may actually be grieving the parent they needed but never had, or the self they can't be. When both parties can name these griefs aloud, the relationship transforms. Conflict becomes co-mourning, and shared tears rebuild connection. This requires parents to do their own grief work—processing losses from their own adolescence and adulthood. Adolescents benefit from witnessing mature adults grieving without collapse, learning that loss doesn't erase love. Rabia teaches that compassion is forged in the furnace of grief, making the parent-teen relationship's inevitable sorrows into opportunities for tenderness.
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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