Understanding that truly loving authority involves releasing control and trusting the child's unfolding, which paradoxically deepens connection.
Rabia's devotion involved releasing attachment to outcomes and surrendering to the divine will. This surrendering paradoxically deepened her connection to the sacred. In parenting, authoritative wisdom includes learning to let go: trusting that the child is not the parent's possession or project but a separate being with their own path. Authoritarian parenting clings tightly, controlling outcomes because security comes from dominance. Authoritative parenting, informed by Rabia's wisdom, loosens its grip progressively, creating space for the child's own unfolding. This doesn't mean abdication—it means releasing the fantasy that the parent can completely control who the child becomes. It means offering guidance, setting boundaries, and then trusting. Paradoxically, children held this way feel safer and closer than those controlled tightly. They don't need to rebel against their parent because they aren't being suffocated. They can be honest because they're not trying to hide from surveillance. They can take risks and learn because failure isn't catastrophic. The parent's willingness to release control, rooted in deep trust and love, creates the psychological freedom children need to genuinely belong and to eventually become their full selves.
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