Learning to love your adolescent through necessary separation and individuation, supporting their becoming without clinging or controlling.
Adolescence requires separation: teens must psychologically separate from parents to develop autonomous identity. This is developmentally necessary but emotionally challenging for both parties. Rabia's love was not possessive; she loved the divine without demanding anything in return or seeking to control the beloved. Parents can practice a similar love: delighting in their teen's emerging independence, supporting choices even when different from their own, and trusting the process. This means tolerating the pain of being less central to your child's life, of not being told everything, of watching them make mistakes you cannot prevent. It means saying 'I trust you' even when afraid, and 'I love you' regardless of agreement. Adolescence is the crucible where this love is tested. When parents can offer acceptance through separation—remaining available, interested, and loving while honoring the teen's need to become themselves—they give the greatest gift: a secure base from which the young person can explore the world and return home.
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