A parental stance shift from solving adolescent problems to witnessing their process with compassion and trust in their becoming.
Rabia's love was contemplative—she witnessed the human condition, the Divine presence, suffering and grace, without needing to fix or improve anything. Many parents in adolescence become anxious fixers: trying to eliminate their teen's pain, control outcomes, and engineer success. This creates subtle rejection ("Your struggle is unacceptable") and erodes the teen's trust in their own competence. The witness stance is radically different. It says: I see you. I see your fear, your confusion, your capacity. I'm not going to rescue you from growth, but I won't abandon you in it either. This doesn't mean passivity—parents still set boundaries and offer guidance. But the underlying posture shifts from anxiety-driven control to spacious presence. Adolescents develop resilience and self-trust when they know someone truly sees them and believes in their capacity to become, even through mistake and struggle.
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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