Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Permanence as Sacred Vow

Framing adoptive commitment as unbreakable spiritual oath, not contract—language and action that reassures children of non-contingent, lifelong belonging.

Rabia
Why It Matters

For Rabia, love to God was irrevocable covenant. Many children arrive in adoptive families having experienced rupture: removal from birth parents, multiple placements, betrayed expectations. Permanence must be communicated not as legal fact alone but as sacred vow—repeatedly, explicitly, and embodied. This means stating clearly: 'You are my child forever. Not if you behave. Not when you're grateful. Forever. I cannot un-adopt you. I will not send you away.' It means parents must examine their own contingency—moments when they threaten loss, express regret, or make love conditional on compliance. Children's nervous systems are exquisitely attuned to these micro-messages. Permanence as vow requires parents to do their own healing work, so they can genuinely hold the child's worst moments without abandoning them. Rabia's devotion persisted through doubt and darkness; adoptive permanence must similarly persist through adolescent rebellion, mental illness, learning disability, or behavioral challenge. This unshakeable commitment becomes the foundation upon which authentic belonging—not just placement—is finally possible.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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