A practice of honoring the child's biological origins and history as part of their complete identity, while fully claiming their place in the adoptive family.
Rabia teaches return—the soul's journey back to its source. In adoption, this translates to children's legitimate need to integrate knowledge of their origins with their present belonging. Rather than forcing a false choice between 'real' and 'adoptive' family, this concept honors both as equally true and necessary to wholeness. Supporting a child's curiosity about birth family, genetic heritage, or cultural origins is not a threat to adoptive family bonds but a spiritual necessity for integrated identity. The parent's role becomes facilitating this return journey without insecurity, perhaps even helping the child search or maintain connection. Rabia's mysticism teaches that return to source doesn't diminish current relationship but completes it. In adoptive families, when children are supported in knowing both their history and their place, they develop a rooted sense of self that belongs fully to multiple truths simultaneously.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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