Rabia's mystical longing for divine union illuminates how parents can experience meaningful separation from adult children as deepening rather than diminishing love.
Rabia spoke of a burning longing (shawq) for closeness with the Divine, a yearning that intensified her spiritual awareness and devotion. Adult parents often experience loss when children leave home; reframing this as sacred longing transforms the emotional landscape. Rather than interpreting distance as rejection or failure, parents can recognize that missing their adult children can deepen appreciation and presence when together. This longing becomes a practice of attention—noticing what you cherish in your child, holding gratitude for their independence, feeling the tender ache of changed closeness. Rabia's tradition suggests that spiritual maturity includes sitting with desire without grasping, with love without possession. For parents, this means the ache of separation becomes a gateway to more mature love, one that honors both connection and autonomy, presence and freedom.
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