The capacity to hold both profound joy in connection and grief in separation, changes, and losses—modeling emotional wholeness for the child.
Rabia's devotional poetry expresses ecstatic love intertwined with longing and loss. Attachment parenting opens the parent to both states: the overwhelming joy of connection with the child and the grief of their separations and growth. Each developmental milestone involves loss—the infant who stops nursing, the toddler who no longer naps in your arms, the teenager who becomes opaque. Cultural narratives push parents to celebrate only the forward progress. But Rabia's example shows that fully feeling both joy and grief is spiritually mature. The parent who can cry with the toddler over the daycare goodbye, who grieves the end of co-sleeping, who feels the bittersweet ache of watching the child become independent—this parent models emotional truth. The child learns that loving someone means being willing to feel the full spectrum. This prevents the dissociation and emotional flatness that comes from celebrating separations we're not ready for. Rabia's framework suggests that the parent's capacity to grieve what is passing while celebrating what is emerging creates the psychological safety for the child to do likewise.
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.