The healing practice of releasing resentment toward ancestors by approaching them with Rabia's unconditional love, transforming family trauma.
Rabia's love was not naive or enabling; it was radical precisely because it held complexity. She loved fully while maintaining spiritual clarity and boundaries. Applied to ancestors, this means honoring those who harmed us, not by minimizing their wrongs but by recognizing their humanity and limitations. Many people carry pain from ancestors—trauma, abandonment, abuse, or simply failure to show up emotionally. Rabia's model suggests that healing comes not through denial or spiritual bypass, but through a love large enough to hold both truth and compassion. This doesn't mean excusing harm, but rather understanding that ancestors were themselves wounded beings doing the best they could. When descendants consciously release resentment and choose love—grieving what was lost, acknowledging what was survived, recognizing the ancestor's own struggles—transformation occurs. This practice is supported across traditions: in family constellation work, therapeutic ancestor practices, and indigenous healing circles that seek to restore balance with the dead. Reconciliation through love breaks cycles of intergenerational trauma and frees both the living and the deceased to rest and evolve.
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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