Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Radical Acceptance and Responsive Love

Meeting your child exactly as they are—not as you imagined them—and allowing their actual nature to teach you how to love them.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia did not demand that reality conform to her expectations; she met it with profound acceptance and responded with compassion. Many adoptive parents arrive with detailed hopes: this child will be outgoing, artistic, athletic, cognitively advanced, grateful, easy. When the actual child arrives—with their own temperament, challenges, learning differences, emotional needs—disappointment and mismatch can arise. Radical acceptance means releasing your image of the child and falling in love with who they actually are. It means your child's autism, their shyness, their learning disability, their grief, their anger—these are not deviations from the plan. They are who your child is. Your task is not to fix them into your original vision but to meet them with curiosity and love. This responsive approach means adjusting your parenting to their actual needs rather than rigidly applying predetermined methods. It means celebrating their genuine gifts rather than mourning imagined ones. A child who receives this radical acceptance—"you are exactly right as you are"—develops resilience and self-trust. They learn that being known and loved does not require conforming to external expectations.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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