Rabia's enduring spiritual legacy illustrates how parents can envision the legacy they want to leave their children as fuel for recovery.
Over 1,300 years after her death, Rabia's teachings still transform lives. She is remembered not for what she accumulated but for how she loved. For parents in addiction, this invites a powerful reframing: What legacy do I want my child to remember? Not material success or the appearance of control, but the courage to face oneself, to change, to love fiercely. Addiction often truncates a parent's sense of future; recovery restores it. By consciously crafting the legacy they wish to leave—a parent who fought for sobriety, who taught their child resilience through their own resilience, who loved without conditions—parents find motivation beyond willpower alone. This legacy-focused vision also helps parents endure the difficult early stages of recovery, when immediate rewards are minimal. Children inheriting a parent's spiritual commitment to change receive a far greater gift than any substance or status could provide.
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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