Embracing the sorrow of your parents' limitations as essential passage toward acceptance and compassionate release.
Rabia experienced profound spiritual grief—mourning separation from the Divine. This grief, however, was transformative rather than destructive. In forgiving parents, we must grieve what we needed and didn't receive. This grief is not wallowing; it is clear-eyed acknowledgment of loss. You needed parents who could see you fully, love unconditionally, prioritize your wellbeing. You may not have received this. The grief of this reality is legitimate and necessary. Rabia's model shows that grief is not opposed to love or forgiveness; rather, it deepens both. When you allow yourself to grieve what your parents could not give, you simultaneously grieve their limitations as human beings. This double grief—for your wound and for their wound—creates the emotional space where genuine forgiveness becomes possible. You are no longer fighting reality or demanding they be other than they were; you are accepting the tragedy of imperfect humans parenting with imperfect love.
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.