Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Practice of Radical Listening

A contemplative communication method where parents listen to teens without agenda, judgment, or premature problem-solving, allowing for genuine understanding.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia's devotional practice centered on listening—to the Divine's presence in silence, in her own heart, in the world's subtle revelations. This deep listening was not passive but intensely active, a concentration of presence. Parents of adolescents often listen with filters: 'How do I fix this?' 'What should I teach?' 'Is this behavior I need to stop?' Rather than truly hearing what the teen is expressing. Radical listening, in Rabia's tradition, means clearing the agenda and opening to the adolescent's actual inner world. This often requires silence—sitting with discomfort rather than filling space with advice. When a teen expresses confusion, fear, or difference, the parent's task is not to immediately correct or console but to listen deeply enough to understand the landscape they're navigating. This practice builds trust because it communicates: 'Your inner world matters. I'm not trying to change you right now. I'm trying to understand you.' Paradoxically, adolescents who experience this kind of complete attention become more open to actual guidance, because they know they're being seen and not just managed. Radical listening is a spiritual practice that honors the teen's humanity.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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