Using wholehearted commitment to your healing as sacred permission to set firm boundaries with family systems.
Rabia's concept of pure devotion—loving the Divine for its own sake, not from fear or hope of reward—translates into psychological permission to prioritize your healing without guilt. In families marked by intergenerational trauma, guilt is a primary mechanism of control: the demand to suffer as proof of loyalty, to carry pain as evidence of love. Pure devotion reframes this. Your commitment to your own healing becomes a sacred act, not selfish betrayal. When you devote yourself fully to breaking cycles—through therapy, spiritual practice, genuine self-care—you honor both your ancestors and your descendants. This concept validates the often-difficult boundary-setting required to interrupt trauma patterns. You are not being disloyal by refusing to participate in family dysfunction; you are being devout to the deepest truth of your life. Rabia's unwavering focus on her relationship with the Divine models how singular devotion can sustain you through the loneliness that sometimes accompanies generational change.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.