Passing down not rules or possessions but the lived example of spiritual deepening, integrity, and acceptance across generations.
Rabia's legacy was not institutional—it was relational and spiritual. She influenced countless students through presence, questions, and her own unwavering practice. For parents of adults, spiritual legacy means becoming someone worth emulating through your own continued growth, not through instruction. This asks: What am I still learning? How do I handle my own pain, failure, and mortality? Am I becoming kinder, wiser, more humble? Adult children inherit not what you tell them to value but what you demonstrably dedicate your life to. Rabia showed that spiritual practice deepens with age and humility. A parent modeling continued transformation—admitting mistakes, pursuing meaning, serving others—creates permission for their adult children to do the same. This legacy survives economic shifts, family conflict, and generational difference because it's rooted in character, not ideology.
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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