Holding space for the child's full narrative—including loss, origin, questions—without attempting to fix, replace, or minimize it.
Rabia's spiritual practice included bearing witness to human suffering and divine mystery without turning away. She sat with pain, her own and others', with radical honesty. Adoptive parents serve their children by becoming sacred witnesses to their unique story: a story that includes the reality of adoption, separation from birth family, possible trauma, and legitimate grief alongside joy and belonging. This means not sanitizing the adoption narrative or presenting it as pure blessing. It means answering questions truthfully, even difficult ones. It means validating the child's feelings about their origin without becoming defensive about your role as parent. It means maintaining connection to their birth culture or facilitating their search if they desire it. This witnessing is not cheerful; it is honest and reverent. By holding space for the whole truth of your child's story—the sorrow and the joy, the questions and the belonging—you honor them as complete human beings worthy of respect. You teach them that their inner world, their history, and their complex feelings all matter.
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.