A reflective practice for examining how ancestral values, wounds, and wisdom manifest in our contemporary choices and relationships.
Rabia's spiritual practice involved constant self-examination and refinement of intention. Applied to ancestors, this becomes a mirror practice: we examine ourselves to see ancestral patterns reflected. Which of our virtues echo ancestral strength? Which of our struggles mirror ancestral wounds? This reflexive work appears across traditions: Jewish tikkun olam continues ancestors' justice work; African diaspora healing addresses ancestral trauma; Buddhist ancestor veneration includes compassion for ancestors' suffering. The mirror practice isn't about blame but awareness: we recognize how ancestral experiences flow through us, how their resilience becomes our resilience, how their unhealed wounds sometimes appear as our patterns. By maintaining this mirror, we become conscious participants in ancestral legacy rather than unconscious carriers of inherited trauma or unexamined virtue. This practice allows us to honor what serves and heal what burdens, becoming the generation that transforms ancestral lineage.
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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