Using spiritual discipline and devotional practice as deliberate breaks in inherited behavioral and emotional cycles.
Rabia spent nights in prayer and contemplation—practices that anchored her identity in something beyond family and society. Intergenerational trauma perpetuates through automatic reactivity: you parent as you were parented, you fear as your mother feared, you withdraw as your father withdrew. Sacred practice—prayer, meditation, ritual, creative expression—creates pauses in this automaticity. These practices interrupt the nervous system's inherited patterns by anchoring you in presence and intention. When you establish a devotional discipline, you're declaring: this is where my identity comes from, not from my family's unhealed wounds. The practice itself becomes a boundary, a container, a living difference. Over time, those who inherit from you will have experienced a parent or ancestor who broke the cycle through spiritual commitment, permanently altering the ancestral line.
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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