Creating family culture where belonging is not contingent on agreement, achievement, or conformity—where the adolescent is received fully as a beloved being, not as a project.
Rabia taught that the Divine's love extended to all beings without judgment or condition—even to those the religious establishment condemned. She lived this radical acceptance in her community, welcoming the marginalized and questioning. For parents with adolescents, this concept challenges one of the deepest parental anxieties: the fear that unconditional acceptance means condoning harmful behavior or abandoning guidance. In truth, they are separate questions. Parents can hold firm boundaries about behavior while maintaining full acceptance of the adolescent's being. A parent can say, 'I don't accept that behavior, and I completely accept you as a person of worth and belonging.' This distinction is liberating for adolescents because it removes the core shame: the terrifying belief that who they essentially are is wrong or unlovable. When adolescents know they belong unconditionally—even as they are being held accountable—they paradoxically become more responsive to guidance, more capable of genuine change, and more able to develop authentic values rather than compliance-based obedience. Many adolescent crises (substance use, sexual risk-taking, school failure) arise partly from the unconscious belief that they are fundamentally unacceptable and might as well prove it true. Families practicing radical acceptance dramatically reduce this trajectory by answering the adolescent's deepest question—'Will you still love me if I'm not who you hoped?'—with an unequivocal yes.
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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