Honoring the specific losses involved in refusing to perpetuate family patterns, including loss of family cohesion and identity.
Breaking intergenerational trauma always involves grief—grief for the family you wish you'd had, grief for the parts of your identity tied to family dysfunction, grief for relationships that may fracture when you establish new boundaries. Rabia understood suffering as an entry point to deeper love and truth. She didn't bypass pain but moved through it with full presence. Applied here, this means creating dedicated space to grieve what you're releasing: perhaps your role as family mediator, the hope that things would change, the fantasy of being rescued by relatives, or the cultural/religious identity intertwined with trauma. This grief work is essential; without it, you unconsciously recreate patterns trying to resolve unfinished mourning. By consciously grieving what you cannot keep from your family legacy while celebrating what you choose to carry forward, you move through transformation with wholeness rather than splitting off from your history. This grief becomes generative—it clears space for new growth.
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.