The painful conflicts and misunderstandings of the teen years serve as refinement of both parent and adolescent character when approached with spiritual intention.
Rabia endured hardship, poverty, and social rejection, viewing these trials not as punishments but as opportunities for the heart to become clearer and more devoted. The parent-teen relationship inevitably contains friction: disagreements about values, autonomy, rules, and future direction. Rather than seeing these conflicts as failures or damage, Rabia's wisdom suggests they are the very friction by which both parent and teen are refined. Each difficult conversation, each moment of being misunderstood and choosing patience anyway, purifies the heart of ego and self-interest. For the parent, this might mean releasing the need to be right or to control outcomes. For the teen, struggle with parental boundaries can purify them of entitled thinking and develop accountability. When both approach conflict as spiritual practice rather than threat, the relationship deepens and both individuals mature. Rabia's life demonstrates that struggle and love are not opposites but partners in transformation.
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