Release perfectionist parenting standards and offer your child what Rabia offered spiritually: imperfect, aching, devoted presence as sufficient.
Rabia's devotion was not composed or controlled but trembling, weeping, and raw. She did not offer perfection but presence. Many parents in addiction recovery are haunted by shame about their inability to be the "perfect parent" they imagine. This framework, rooted in Rabia's tradition, redefines sufficiency: your child does not need a perfect parent but a parent who shows up, who admits mistakes, who tries again. When you sit with your child while struggling with cravings and offer honest attention rather than absence, you give a gift more valuable than flawless performance. Rabia understood that spiritual intimacy deepens through vulnerability, not mastery. Applied to parenting during recovery, this means your child learns resilience not from having an unbroken parent but from witnessing someone they love engage honestly with difficulty. Your imperfect, aching, devoted presence—the willingness to be there while broken and healing—becomes the actual inheritance you leave. This shifts recovery from a private project into a shared human act.
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.