Understanding adolescent restlessness, questioning, and emotional intensity as spiritual seeking rather than rebellion.
Rabia spoke of spiritual longing—an ache for connection and meaning that cannot be satisfied by surface things. Adolescents experience comparable existential longing: identity questions, yearning for belonging, questioning inherited beliefs and family narratives. Parents often pathologize this as moodiness or defiance. Reframing adolescent longing as a legitimate spiritual and psychological quest honors the teen's inner work. This 'station of longing' is where teens ask 'Who am I?' and 'What do I truly value?' rather than simply accepting parental answers. Parents who recognize this longing can guide without crushing it—offering wisdom, space for exploration, and reassurance that seeking is healthy. The restlessness and questioning, rather than problems to suppress, become opportunities for depth, authenticity, and genuine connection between parent and teen.
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