A reframing of adoption-related loss and trauma as spiritually generative experiences that deepen wisdom, compassion, and relational capacity in both parent and child.
Rabia's own life involved significant suffering and loss, yet she transformed these experiences into profound mystical insight. In adoption, both parent and child carry wounds—the child's separation trauma, the parent's grief about infertility or loss. This concept proposes that rather than pathologizing these wounds or treating them as damage to overcome, they can be recognized as initiatory experiences that deepen spiritual maturity. The child's early loss, when integrated with presence and love, can become the foundation for extraordinary compassion and resilience. Parents who grieve their unmet expectations can develop a humility and flexibility that rigid plans would never allow. This doesn't minimize real trauma or suggest pain should be romanticized, but rather honors how vulnerability, when witnessed with care, becomes the ground of authentic transformation and mutual awakening.
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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