Processing the losses inherent in adult relationships—the child you imagined, the parent you thought you'd be—to access more authentic, mature love.
Rabia experienced profound loss and suffering, which she understood not as obstacles to love but as doorways into it. For adult relationships with adult children, the concept of grief as gateway recognizes that accepting your adult child fully involves grieving. You must grieve the child they were and will never be again. You must grieve the life path you imagined for them that they rejected. You must grieve the idealized parent you thought you would become. You may grieve unmet needs from your own parents that you unconsciously hoped your adult child would fulfill. This grief is not morbid; it is necessary. When you move through it consciously rather than denying it, grief becomes a gateway. On the other side of grief lies acceptance of what is real: your actual adult child, with their actual choices and limitations. Your actual self as a parent, with your actual flaws and finitude. This acceptance opens space for a more mature, generous love—one less tangled with fantasy and need. Paradoxically, grieving what you imagined allows you to love what is real. This deeper love is more stable because it is rooted in truth rather than projection. It is more resilient because it has survived the collision between expectation and reality.
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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