A framework for understanding adolescent rebellion and boundary-setting as necessary spiritual fires that purify and individuate, not threats to the relationship.
Rabia described love that burns away ego and illusion—a cleansing fire necessary for spiritual maturity. Adolescence is precisely this kind of fire: the teen's rejection of parental values, experimentation with identity, and boundary assertion feel like rejection to parents but serve a critical developmental purpose. This concept reframes rebellion not as pathology but as the heat necessary for individuation. The parent's task is not to extinguish the fire but to remain present to it—to provide a safe container for burning without controlling the outcome. Rabia's non-attachment and trust in divine purpose offer parents a spiritual resource: the ability to witness their teen's necessary separation without taking it personally, without collapsing into either over-control or abandonment. When parents understand that this fire serves both the teen's maturation and the relationship's eventual transformation into adult mutuality, they can support rather than resist this essential passage.
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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