Letting go of inherited expectations and identities that don't serve your soul, freeing both yourself and your family from performed roles.
Rabia abandoned worldly attachments and family obligation to pursue direct union with the Divine. This wasn't rejection but radical prioritization. Intergenerational trauma includes roles: the responsible child, the sick one, the strong one, the peacemaker. These roles protect families temporarily but become prisons across generations. You become the healer when someone needed one, the silent one when chaos demanded it, the achiever when love felt conditional on performance. Sacred abandonment means consciously releasing these inherited scripts. Not abandoning your family, but abandoning the requirement to remain who trauma needs you to be. This is terrifying because family systems stabilize around your role. When you refuse it, there's temporary chaos. But that chaos is transformational. Your children inherit the permission to be unfinished, to change, to want differently than their grandparents wanted. They see a parent who said: "I love you, and I am also allowed to become myself." This paradox heals generations.
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