Creating bounded emotional and physical space where a teen feels witnessed without judgment, interrogation, or rescue—the core container for trust and belonging.
Rabia's life was devoted to a radical presence with the Divine, undistracted and complete. Translated to the parent-teen home, this becomes the practice of creating sanctuary—moments where the parent is fully present, not fixing, not questioning, not performing. Adolescence is a time of profound disorientation; teens need spaces where they can exist as they are without immediately being corrected, analyzed, or solved. A sanctuary of presence might be a regular car ride, a shared meal, a walk where the parent is simply alongside, available but not invasive. It requires the parent to manage their own anxiety enough to tolerate their teen's confusion, anger, or silence without needing to resolve it immediately. This is difficult because parental protection instinct is strong, and silence feels like failure. But teens are also developing their capacity to hold complexity; they need to think aloud without a parent jumping to fix or judge. Sanctuary means: you are safe here to be confused, angry, lost, or changing. I am here. I am listening. I will not abandon you.
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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