Understanding that true family connection requires first belonging to yourself—breaking inherited patterns of self-abandonment.
Rabia's pure devotion was to the Divine first, which paradoxically freed her to love humanely and authentically. In families marked by trauma, belonging often means disappearing yourself: absorbing a parent's rage to keep the peace, hiding your needs to protect a wounded caregiver, or abandoning your own path to honor family expectations. The paradox is that genuine belonging requires the opposite: radical self-loyalty. You must learn to belong to yourself before you can belong healthily to your family. This means naming your own needs, honoring your own pain, and sometimes creating distance from family systems that demand your self-erasure. Rabia's legacy shows that when you commit to your own truth first, real intimacy becomes possible—the kind that doesn't require anyone to disappear.
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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