Moving through sorrow for ancestral suffering without being trapped in it, honoring lineage while choosing freedom.
Part of breaking intergenerational trauma involves grieving what your ancestors experienced and could not heal, grieving the family patterns that limited everyone involved. Rabia's spirituality was not transcendent escapism but deeply embodied—she felt her longing, her loneliness, her difficulty, and transformed it through love and devotion. Sacred grief work means creating space to feel the sorrow of your lineage, to weep for your grandparents' limitations, to acknowledge their pain without taking responsibility for solving it. This is distinct from depression or enmeshment; it's a conscious, bounded practice of honoring what was suffered so that you can release it. Through community witness, contemplative practice, and ritual acknowledgment, you become the one who can feel what previous generations could not express, freeing both them and yourself.
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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