Viewing estrangement or conflict with adult children as an opportunity for deep inner work rather than a problem to solve or blame to assign.
Many adult parent-child relationships carry rupture—unspoken hurts, old arguments, emotional distance. Rabia's spiritual path involved rigorous self-examination and willingness to surrender attachment to being right. Reconciliation in this framework isn't about forcing connection or quick forgiveness; it's about doing your inner work regardless of whether the other person reciprocates. This means: examining your role in the rupture without defensiveness, feeling genuine remorse for harm caused, releasing the need to be vindicated, and continuously softening your heart toward your adult child's pain (even if their pain was partly their own doing). Paradoxically, when you stop demanding reconciliation and instead pursue spiritual maturity—humility, accountability, grief—the relationship often naturally begins to heal. The adult child senses that you're no longer fighting to win but genuinely evolving. Even if the relationship never fully resolves, your inner work prevents bitterness from poisoning your remaining years. Rabia would call this love that doesn't require a particular outcome—love as its own justification.
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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