The shift from viewing teen resistance as pathology to recognizing it as necessary psychological work of individuation.
Rabia accepted her circumstances—poverty, loss, obscurity—not with passive resignation but with active spiritual reorientation. Parents can apply this by accepting that some degree of defiance, boundary-testing, and apparent rejection is developmentally necessary and healthy. The question shifts from 'How do I eliminate this defiance?' to 'What is this resistance telling me about what my teen needs to become?' A teen who questions parental values is not corrupted; they are developing their own philosophical foundation. A teen who refuses to conform is not failed; they are discovering their authentic self. When parents radically accept this developmental task, they reduce the shame and secrecy that escalate conflict. They can then engage with the actual concern beneath the defiance—perhaps a need for autonomy, a value conflict, or fear about identity—rather than battling the symptom.
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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