Recognizing that your teen inhabits different identities in different contexts and seeing this as healthy multiplicity, not deception or fragmentation.
Rabia spoke of veils—the ways reality is filtered through perception and relationship. Adolescents similarly develop different presentations of self: who they are with parents, with peers, with teachers, online. Parents often pathologize this as 'phoniness' or inconsistency, demanding that teens be 'the same person everywhere.' But psychological research confirms that some multiplicity is healthy development. Your teen learning to modulate self-presentation, to code-switch, to inhabit different social contexts is actually increasing sophistication. Rabia's framework of veils suggests these aren't deceptions but necessary adaptations. Your role is not to police consistency but to create a home where your teen feels safe being their most authentic self—knowing there's at least one context where masks aren't required. By accepting that your teen is different with you than with peers, you honor their developmental work. You also create space for genuine connection because you're not demanding they collapse all versions of self into the version you see.
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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