Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Repair and Reconciliation as Love Language

Teaching and practicing genuine apology, accountability, and relational repair—showing teens that love includes acknowledging harm and restoring connection.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia taught that relationship with the Divine involves constant return, repentance, and renewal. Parent-teen conflict is inevitable and necessary. The question is not whether ruptures occur but whether they are repaired. Many parents believe repair means the teen apologizing and complying. True repair in Rabia's tradition means the parent—the more mature party—taking responsibility for their own impact, apologizing sincerely, and actively restoring connection. When a parent snaps in anger, later acknowledges the harshness, and explains their own stress without excusing the behavior, the teen learns that relationships survive rupture through honesty and accountability. This becomes the teen's template for all relationships. Conversely, when parents demand apologies while refusing to acknowledge their own mistakes, teens internalize that power determines truth and love is conditional on obedience. Rabia's legacy emphasizes that love's deepest expression is the willingness to be wrong, to repair, and to continually choose reconnection. This practice transforms conflict into deeper trust.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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