Affirming birth parents' love and sacrifice as legitimate and significant, not as competitors to adoptive kinship.
Rabia's devotion to the Divine was singular and all-consuming, yet she also honored the companions and teachers who had walked the spiritual path before her. In adoptive parenting, honoring the child's first love story—their connection to birth parents—paradoxically strengthens rather than threatens the adoptive bond. Many adoptive parents unconsciously compete with birth parents or minimize their significance, fearing that acknowledgment of love elsewhere will diminish the child's attachment to them. Rabia's model suggests that love is not a zero-sum resource. A child can love and grieve birth parents while fully belonging to adoptive parents. This practice requires adoptive parents to speak of birth parents with respect, to wonder aloud about them without bitterness, to help a child understand that being relinquished was likely an act of love, even if shrouded in circumstance. When parents practice this honoring, they communicate: your first love is real and good, and so is ours. The child is freed from the splitting that occurs when parents demand that belonging to one family requires disowning another. Integration becomes possible. The child's history is treated as continuous, not fractured.
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