Hold simultaneous grief for lost timelines and joy in your child's actual being—Rabia's both/and theology resolves false binary choices.
Rabia's love was fierce and paradoxical: she could mourn separation from the divine while rejoicing in that very love. Parents navigate impossible emotions: grief for the typical childhood you imagined, exhaustion from endless support needs, yet also deep joy in your child's unique gifts and presence. Mainstream psychology often frames these as stages to resolve. Rabia teaches that they coexist eternally. You can grieve the autism diagnosis while marveling at your child's mind. You can mourn lost independence while celebrating their courage. You can feel devastated by a meltdown and moved by their vulnerability. This paradox isn't neurosis—it's spiritual maturity. Rabia never resolved her love into simplicity; she lived the contradiction as the truest form of faith. For parents, this permission to hold grief and joy simultaneously liberates you from the exhausting work of choosing one. Your contradictory feelings aren't failures. They are the complete truth of loving a disabled or neurodivergent human.
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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