Rabia's practice of witnessing divine presence in all moments offers a contemplative tool for parents to observe teen behavior with compassion rather than reactivity.
Rabia cultivated constant awareness of divine presence, seeing beyond surface actions to deeper spiritual reality. Parents can adapt this contemplative stance by pausing before reacting to teen conflict or defiance—witnessing the fear, confusion, or developmental need beneath the behavior. This witnessing practice interrupts the cycle of escalation common in adolescent homes. Instead of matching a teen's anger with authority, a witnessing parent asks: What is my child protecting? What are they becoming? This creates space for dialogue rather than power struggle. The practice doesn't ignore problems; rather, it holds problems alongside recognition of the teen's intrinsic worth and developmental legitimacy. For teens, having a parent who can witness their inner world—not just their external conduct—builds the neural pathways for self-compassion. They internalize this witness, developing ability to observe their own impulses without shame. This mirrors Rabia's legacy of seeing the sacred within all experience.
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