Recognition that adolescent individuation requires passionate intensity and apparent rejection, a burning away of childhood identity that mirrors mystical transformation.
Rabia described divine love as a fire that consumed her, stripping away all illusion. Adolescence is similarly a fire—the teen must burn away childhood dependency to forge adult identity. Parents often experience this as rejection or betrayal, yet it is developmentally sacred. The "necessary separation" is not failure of relationship but its deepening. When a teen distances, argues, or rejects parental values, they are not abandoning love; they are incinerating the illusion that they are their parents' extension. Rabia's willingness to be consumed by love suggests parents too must be willing to be transformed by their adolescent's need for separation. This reframe moves parents from defensive hurt to witnessing awe: "My child is burning away what was, to become who they must be." The relationship survives the fire not by preventing it, but by tending it with presence rather than control.
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