Treating conversations with adolescents as moments of reverent attention, not problem-solving sessions.
Rabia's devotion expressed itself in profound states of listening—to divine presence, to inner truth, to the beloved. Parents often approach adolescent conversations with agendas: correcting behavior, extracting information, imparting lessons. This concept reimagines dialogue as devotional practice. Sacred listening means suspending judgment, resisting the urge to interrupt or teach, and genuinely seeking to understand what the teen is experiencing. It requires parents to listen not just to words but to emotional currents—fear beneath defensiveness, grief beneath anger, longing beneath dismissal. Adolescents, developmentally wired to individuate, feel that listening is rare and precious. When a parent truly hears them, something shifts in the relationship: the teen becomes less reactive, more reflective. This practice doesn't eliminate necessary boundaries or discussions; rather, it transforms them. A conversation that begins with genuine listening often resolves differently than one begun with correction.
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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