Rabia's life reframes parenting not as duty conflicting with spiritual growth but as the spiritual practice itself—especially powerful for recovering parents.
Though Rabia had no children of her own, her tradition of radical devotion applies directly: parenting can be spiritual practice, not distraction from it. For recovering addicted parents, this reframing is transformative. Rather than viewing parenting as obligation that competes with self-care or spiritual work, Rabia's model suggests that showing up for a child—with presence, honesty, and love—is itself the highest spiritual practice. Each diaper changed, each tear listened to, each boundary set, each apology offered becomes an act of devotion. This removes the false binary between parental responsibility and personal recovery; they are one practice. When parents embrace parenting as spiritual work requiring the same committed presence Rabia offered prayer, they access profound meaning and sustainable motivation for recovery. Children feel this shift: they are not obstacles to parental healing but partners in it, and their presence becomes the sacred ground where parent and child heal together.
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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