Recognition that adolescent yearning for independence mirrors the soul's yearning for the divine, making separation developmental rather than rejective.
Rabia spoke of the soul's burning longing for union with the beloved. Adolescents experience an analogous longing—to become themselves, to separate from parental identity, to find their place in the world. This framework redefines the parent-teen conflict not as rebellion but as sacred longing. When teenagers pull away, argue, or assert difference, they're enacting the soul's movement toward authenticity. Parents schooled in this tradition see their teen's intensity not as hostility but as passion directed toward becoming. The concept dignifies adolescent restlessness as spiritual hunger rather than pathology. Understanding this shift allows parents to honor their teen's seeking while maintaining presence. Just as Rabia's devotion was marked by fervent yearning, adolescents' turbulence reflects their deep need to know themselves as separate, autonomous beings. This reframing transforms family tension into evidence of healthy psychological-spiritual development rather than relational failure.
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