A temporal practice that honors family history while anchoring identity and choices in future possibility rather than past determination.
Trauma fixes consciousness in the past—'this happened to my family, so this will happen to me.' Rabia's spiritual vision was always toward the Beloved, toward transcendence. Remembering Forward combines both: you fully acknowledge your family's history—the wounds, the survival, the resilience—but you consciously anchor your sense of self in future becoming rather than past repetition. This isn't denial but temporal reorientation. You might journal: 'My grandmother survived abandonment; I remember her strength. Because of her survival, I exist. I choose to use that existence differently.' You tell new stories about your family that honor truth while opening possibility. You imagine your children's children free from the weight you carry. This practice is neither forgetting the past nor being imprisoned by it; you become a hinge generation, the place where ancestral survival meets descendant freedom. Remembering Forward makes you conscious architect of legacy, not its unconscious vehicle.
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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