Recognizing that adoptive parenting requires sustained emotional and relational work, and treating this work itself as spiritual practice.
Rabia's devotion was not passive sentiment; it was active, rigorous labour of the heart—prayer, service, and continuous recommitment. Adoptive parenting similarly demands what might be called 'love-labour': the relentless work of showing up for a child whose trust was broken, whose neurological system may be dysregulated, whose grief surfaces unpredictably. This labor includes therapeutic parenting, learning trauma-informed approaches, managing behavioural challenges with patience, and repairing ruptures over and over. Rather than viewing this as burden or sacrifice, Rabia's model invites you to see the work itself as the devotion. Each act of patient presence, each choice to regulate your own nervous system so you can meet your child's dysregulation, each boundary set with love—these are prayers. The framework shifts adoption from a transaction (you save them, they love you) to a commitment (you show up, you learn, you persist). This honoring of the work prevents burnout by reorienting its meaning: it is not obligation, but love expressed through sustained effort and presence.
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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