The practice of showing up for your teen with unconditional presence rather than problem-solving, rooted in Rabia's model of pure devotion.
Rabia al-Adawiyya taught that love means turning toward the beloved with complete attention, not to change them but to honor their essence. For parents navigating adolescence, this means resisting the urge to immediately correct, advise, or solve your teen's struggles. Instead, witnessing—truly seeing their experience, their confusion, their growth—becomes the primary act of love. This shifts the parent-teen dynamic from adversarial (parent as fixer) to relational (parent as anchor). When teens feel genuinely witnessed rather than evaluated, they become more open to guidance. Rabia's legacy reminds us that the deepest belonging emerges not from shared solutions but from mutual recognition. In adolescence, when identity is fragile and peer belonging feels urgent, a parent's witnessing presence becomes a counterbalance—proof that you matter not for what you achieve or fix, but for who you are becoming.
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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