Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Permission to Grieve What Doesn't Fit

A practice of honoring the real loss neurodivergent people experience—unmet needs, missed connections, inaccessible spaces—rather than demanding toxic positivity or forced gratitude.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia wept—she grieved separation, yearned visibly, allowed sorrow full expression as part of her spiritual path. Neurodivergent people often navigate unspoken pressure to be grateful for basic accessibility, to suppress grief about what their neurodivergence costs them, or to pretend that the gap between their needs and available structures causes no pain. Rabia's tradition honors grief as legitimate spiritual/emotional material. Permission to grieve means naming: I'm sad that I can't attend that gathering because of sensory needs, I'm angry that accessible options are scarce, I'm grieving the friendships I can't maintain because of energy constraints. This grief is real and worthy of space. Communities practicing Rabia's wisdom create containers for sorrow without rushing toward silver linings or inspirational narratives. Belonging includes the right to acknowledge what's hard, to feel loss fully, to let grief teach you about what you care about. Neurodivergent people can stop performing resilience and instead move through necessary sorrow with witnesses who say: your grief is valid; what you're mourning matters.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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