A contemplative practice of internal stillness that interrupts automatic trauma responses, creating freedom to respond consciously.
Rabia practiced continuous devotion as a form of awareness—always returning consciousness to the Divine presence. This created an internal station where she could observe her own mind. In trauma healing, this translates to the sacred pause: the microcosm of stillness between trigger and response where you notice you're about to repeat a family pattern. This isn't suppression or control; it's awareness. When ancestral anger rises, or shame activates, or numbing begins, the sacred pause is the breath where you ask: 'Is this mine, or inherited? Do I choose this response?' Rabia's tradition shows that consciousness itself is the healer. By cultivating this pause through prayer, meditation, or mindful presence, you interrupt automatic cycles. Your children inherit not the pattern but the possibility of pausing—a legacy of freedom rather than compulsion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.