A contemplative practice of deep, non-judgmental listening to the child's inner world, emotions, and unspoken needs as a primary spiritual discipline.
Rabia's relationship with God centered on radical availability—being fully present and attentive to the Divine's presence in all moments. She cultivated extraordinary listening. In adoptive parenting, children often experience adults who are eager to teach, fix, explain, or manage behavior, but may not feel truly heard. Sacred Listening is a discipline where the parent creates spaciousness to receive the child as they are, particularly around sensitive topics: grief about adoption, questions of identity, anger, or experiences of rejection. This practice means setting aside the parent's own agenda, defensiveness, or need to reassure. The parent listens to understand the child's inner experience, not to debate it or correct it. For traumatized children, this listening creates neural pathways of safety. For all children, it communicates: your inner world matters, your experience is valid, you are known. Sacred Listening extends beyond words to sensing the child's emotional states, unmet needs, and relational patterns. Over time, this practice helps the parent attune to the child's authentic self and supports the child in developing their own capacity for self-awareness and genuine connection.
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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